Hazzard to retire

Transcription

Hazzard to retire
Worcester Polytechnic Institute
DigitalCommons@WPI
Newspeak All Issues
Newspeak
9-13-1977
Newspeak Volume 05, Issue 16, September 13,
1977
The Students of Worcester Polytechnic Institute
Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/newspeak
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The Students of Worcester Polytechnic Institute, "Newspeak Volume 05, Issue 16, September 13, 1977" (1977). Newspeak All Issues.
Book 81.
http://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/newspeak/81
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t 1sves challenge behind
Hazzard to retire
by Rory J O'Connor
1 Will be nice af1er ntne years not to
lfllllt at 1he level of IntenSity one h3s to
con ubute •o this job "
SnsaVS George W . Hazzard, president of
~I President Hauard announced last
~· hrs mtenuon to rellre rn June of 1978,
e1 commencement .
'II vou're going 10 make WPI pleased
you you can't work six or eight hours
dar You have 10 work all week long. If
p~don't want to work quite that hard, you
111/1 no• be •n the JOb," he sa•d, explaining
111 reasons for retirement. "ll's time for
,.neone else 1o take over the cudgels;
'/lie lhe problems; do lhe work," he
considers the greatest ac·
of his administration to be
of the WPI Plan for
•ndlllgraou~te education. "We have en·
r. ourdged people 10 carry out thts major
rnnova1ron From my vtewpoint we have
r-rca1ed a much more panicipatory college.
There weren't any students on commtttees
when I came; the faculty governtng policy
had JUSI been voted in. We can't stl on our
hands: we can't say lhe Plan is in its final
form and coast blithely forward. We have
•o plan our next great leap forward."
In addi1on 10 the Plan, Hazzard is pleaSI8d
wilh one aspect of the financial situation of
I he college. "The other side of the coin is
that we have a balanced budget," he said.
" l•'s good for the faculty, students. people
who have 10 work here for the next fifteen
vears. I feel pleased about that."
However, Hazzard also acknowledges
nroblems that have yet to be solved, and
lace his successor. "One of the things that
needs to be done is 10 Cl'88te a really good
scheme for faculty renewal. A lot of faculty
hav,. worked very, very hdrd to make things
no. .Jnd they've sacrificed the Sl81f renewal
like reading and research that you can't do
with such a studen1 load. Another thing we
lack 1s cloSI8r interaction wrth the other
colleges •n 1he area, especially Holy Cross
.md Clark. We haven't got as many fruitful
tnleraclions with those institutions as we
would like."
As for other big problems, ''one of them
is the endowment,'' he stated. "We haven't
raised the endewmem anywhere nearly as
much as we'd like ro. Another is how to
keep •he freshness, the sense of creativity
in •he WPI Plan. It's a big, big problem."
The presidential SI8Srch committee is
presently looking al a list of over 200
nossible candidates for Hazzard's post.
"They're a good commit1ee, with a good
set of criteria," stated Hazzard. "But, we all
set big goals, and then we compromise
wrth realily. You'd like (the new president)
to do all the things the crlleria describe. It'll
he a challenge 10 see how many of thoSI8
we can find •n one ind1vrdua1. You elepect
them to walk on water," he commented.
Hazzard does not think it likely that the next
r>restden• of WPI will be a woman, though.
" l1's highly unlikely the number of women
candidates will be as big as men can·
didates." He allributes this mainly to the
sman number of women '" science and
P-ngineering.
After he leaves WPI, Hazzard plans to
hve •n a home in Petersham, and hopes to
do consuhing work in relation to higher
education. " I don't have any firm plans,"
he claims, "I'd like to find some work that
will be helpful to higher education. My firm
conviction is that I shouldn't spend a lot of
•ime looking; I work for WPI. That's what I
get paid for.''
student new spaper of W orcester Polytechnic Institute
Tuesday, September 13, 19n
PIRG in
social fee
he summer shuffle
by DaVId Thompson
Ounng the summer of 1977. WPI began a
lliSSM! campus Improvement program.
uded were the renovallon of Sanford
Iiiey dorms. the restoration of Boynton
Hal the replacement of Washburn's wall,
assorted additions and alterations
!lloughout campus.
Work on Ailey began at the t~nd of 0 term
May, and continued unul the night
the freshmen arrived. In this
task, the floors of all 75 rooms
carpeted and the walls remodeled
fresh plaster. The partitions that had
Mled some rooms were removed, and the
Ill doors were replaced with metal ones.
entire plumbing system IS new, and the
have been rewired to accommodate
which was heretofore 1mIndividual phones are also
officials were first faced with a
regarding Ailey; a law requires that
include the construction of
lor the handicapped. This would
meant elevators in Riley if the dorms
rebuilt. F011unately, a variance states
the law w•ll be satisfied if access is
to all necessities on campus for
As a result, we have
ramps leading to Morgan,
•he mail room. food and even the
are at the handicap's disposal.
Hall, except for some offices,
guued The basement will be
one foot (for head room). and the
floor will be re InStalled. Support
Will be added throughout the
Completion IS projected for April
109 has been transformed into
lecture haD. The floor has been
carpeted, and resealed. New
facilities have also been sup·
operated telephone lines were
lhis summer Direct long distance
Riley -
photo bV Mark Hecker
not long ago
ri•aling is possible, and the WPI operator
monitors only the incoming cans. The old
1wo panel switchboard is gone, with a
c;mall console in ils stead.
The 25 Trowbrldg6 'Road dormitory, first
npened in January of this year, was
refurbished after many complaints this
:c;pring by residents of inadequate end faulty
facilities. Brand new bathrooms have been
built, and a much needed coal of paint
rovers the formerly peeling walls.
Anthony Ruksnaitis. college engineer,
c:on1rac1ed and supervised much of the
work on campus, including the renovation
nf Alumni Gym pool. The Federal Housing
and Urban Development program funded
the addition of solar heaung panels for
water heating.
The btll for Ailey 1s $600,000; Boynton will
cost approlC•mately 1 .4 million dollars and
$50,000 was spent on Higg1ns 109. Other
figures are not available at lhe printing of
1his article.
: one college pres.
A miStake by the WPI Accounting Office
has cost many unsuspecting students two
dollars to pay for an organization some of
them wouldn't knowingly support.
A two dollar charge was tacked onto lhe
usual social fee that is included in the
tuition bill for the first semester to support
Mass PIAG, a statewide organization of
students affiliated w1th Ralph Nader.
PIAG usually has a checkoff feature on
the tuition bill that allows tl"lose students
who do not wish 10 suppon PIRG to delete
•he fee from their bill. This feature was left
nut as a result of a misunderstanding by the
Ac:counling Office.
William Barrett, controller and assistant
•reasurer for WPI. said, "It was my understanding that it was a required fee now.
That apparently was a misunderstanding."
He said that since more than half the
s1udent body had supported PIAG last year
he thought the fee would be mandatory
rhis year. He added that PIAG will be
making refunds to whoever wants them
around the latter part · of September, and
•hat "C and 0 terms the students will have
the option of paying or not paying it."
Charles Harak, the auomey for the PIAG
c:hapter at WPI said, "We have no desire to
take anybody's money that does not want
10 support us." When asked why PIAG
nppropriates money through the school's
hilling instead of the Student Activities
Board fund. Harak said that PIAG had a full
staff on campus and couldn't depend on
lhe SAB ro fund them, explaining that
PIAG needed a more reliable source of
funds. He justified this by saying that more
•han 50 per cent of the student body had
c;•gned a petition supporting PIAG
Mass. PIAG is a consumer and en·
vironmental protection organization
rledicated to giving students a more active
vo•ce 1n federal and state tssues, and
1aach1ng 1hem to research, lobby. and
handle 1he media.
arch 1S on!
Do you have teschmg, resesrch snd
expeflence? Do you hold 11
and w1sh to be mvolved w1th 11
New England engineering college
1 umque reputst1on for innovative,
education' If so, you may be
take over the rems of leadership
of a college known es Wor·
Polytechmc Institute.
•he above messege may never be
ilmong the help wan1ed ads of a local
an advl3rtisemem of simil11r
cl<>e& '" fac• appear •n a publicauon
Pti•e '" educauon. called The
r-'QITratr,·~,,.
Chromcle of Higher Education The ad
proclaims lhe need for an 1nd1vidual
"• ommilled to the ideals of technological
humanism" and w!'!o " will play a ma1or role
•n furthering the overall academ•c and
fmanctal development of the college "
The need for ·~·s recruitment campargn
of sorls ansc!l from lhe tact that now
President George Hazzard has expressed
h•s wrshes •o retire. Although he •s not
•'xpec•ed •o s1ep down until June, early
plannrng w1ll be required lo choose a
successor 10 th1s prestigous post . Hence, a
new admrnis1rative commi11ee has been
formed. officially labeled " The Presidential
Search commillee," to find a replacement
hy next year
Headed b,. PaulS . Morgan, President of
Morgan Construction Company in Worresler ;~nd Vtce Chairman of WPI's board
uf 1rus1ees, I he comm•llee consists of Dean
R,1y Boltz, Dean of Faculty; Dean W111iam
CirOQan. Dean of Underqtaduates Studies;
Rom~o L. Morun1. Professor of Electncal
Engineenng. Tom 0. Panek, J>re~ident of
•he s1udent body, am.l 1rustees John L
Brown. C. Marshall Oauu, and Morris
Tauenyaum
Among the desired qualificattons for
nres1den1 as outlined by the committee are
a "s1rong interest in and commitment to
htgh quality undergraduate education."
"scicntiS1 ·eng•neer preferably with earned
rioctorate," "interest and compe11mce '"
fund raising" and "physically energetiC."
In addi11on 10 direct advertisement for
he presidential posrtion, the committee IS
.ll!!o solic1ting recommendations from
0Pans of other engineering colleges,
nresrrlents of the Consortium colleges,
<~lumni and faculty Wrlling to be responsive
continue to page 4
,
Pag 2
NEWSPEAK
Tuesday, SepternbeJ 13
Editorial policy
Editorial:
One of our new Freshman reporters came to me this week with a
problem that concerns us all. It seems that, after being given a story
about the school's spending of an extremely large amount of money, he
went to the administrative figure under whose authority the expenditure
fell. Unfortunately, that person refused comment on the issue at hand,
claiming, "That's not something that you should be concerned with, "
and funher accusing the reporter with dredging up dirt in the interests
of sensationalism.
This is not the first time that we, in trying to bring you the facts,
have run into stonewalls, in the form of this gentleman, and others in
the administrative network. In this case, we were trying to clarify rumors
that the money had been spent without property authorization. This,
then, is the real issue: do we, as students, have a right to assure ourselves that our money is being spent properly, or are we at the mercy of
an autonomous figure who sees himself as responsible to nobody but
himself?
Don't kid yourselves into thinking that I' m talking about an isolated
situation here. We at Newspeak have found a growing trend among
people responsible for various services and organizations around
campus to assume similar attitudes toward student inqueries.
Although I'm fully aware that running a school of this size is big
business, I can't condone having someone treating students like they're
goods stacked on a shelf. Students, assuming that they are couneous in
asking, should have their inqueries treated with all due regards to the
fact that they are only trying to ensure the best possible end results for
the college.
.
WPI prides itself on educating scientists and engineers who are
able to interact with society. Perhaps the school must first educate
ITSELF before trying to teach others. I don't think any of us would like
to use, " Do as I say, not as I do" as the college motto.
Tom Daniels
RJO
N ewspeak, the student newspaper at WPI, is dedicated
respo nsibly inform ing the student b ody of WP I, as well as faculty,
and administration, of campus news and opinion. In order to raca~aa~
communication between the newspaper staff and the community
large, we will outline our editorial policy here.
In the past, we have allowed contributions from non-staff m~~mt~_.
to be publistleoas they were written . However, though we still
outside contributions, these items are now subject to
rewriting, and submission does not guarantee inclusion. In addition,
by-lines will be given to non-staff members for any type of pr•
or story.
Letters to the Editor are welcome at all times. Letters should bt
topics of general interest to the WPI community, typed and ligaed
the author. The author must include name and address wieh
signature. This is the only way letters will be accepted; unsigned
will not be considered . Under certain circ~mst~nces, nam•,....
withheld or a pseudonym may be used. Th1s will be done on1v M
discretion of the Editor-in-chief.
Contributions for the Op-ed page are solicited from the COIIMI•I
at large. These are opinions on general topics, or first-hand ICCI•III'~I
interesting events or persons. They may be political in nature. lJ'I. .III
be published on a page set aside for this purpose, and willlnCIII!MirJII
name of the author.
Editorials are the opinion of the editor whose FULL narnt . . . .
after the piece. Any editor may indicate agreement with the
placing his-her initials after the author's name. However, IMi f1
particular editor's initials should not nece~arily construe ag,.....
disagreement with the content of the editorial. St11ff membersnot editors may write opinionated pieces. These will not be
tersigned .
Classified advertisements are provided free for members of
WPI community only. All other advertising will be considenMt
advertising, and the appropriate rates will apply. For i"n1f01'1Mtloll
contact the advertising manager.
____,,._...
,
__ -
...-.em IIMifU editor
larry ArniMOII
. . . . . . .0 ...
CrejgVICIIert
lten Mendle
fecylty ectv.or
Prof . P'etncll Dunn
753·14!1 dl4
end~or
Alwyn Frtzgereld
New~~Mt•ll of Worcest.,. Polytechnic tnstllute. fofm4!rly the Tecll N.ws. h•s btt'n
published weekly duronQ the ec.ctem oc year, ucept durlnQ cqttege vautlons, since~ .
The edi tor oal opontons expresHd het'ton are the opon10ns ot the person ~ name
appean at the end of the editor tal. and are not ne<essaro ly lhOW o f the edotoroal boMd or
WPI Edotor oal and 8 usoness offtces aretocat fd •n room 01, Sanford R iley Hall, •t WPI .
~adhne for copy subm•SSion tS noon of the S.turday pncfdong publicatiOn. Prlnllng
done by ware Rtvtr N-1. Inc., • ChUt'Ch St • Ware, Me . Second c lass pos~e p8 td at
w orcest.,. Me Sublc;r•PIIon Ret• - •& 00 per school year , sonv te copon 10 cents Make a ll
che<ks pa~abte to W~t N--.eall. •
~
T
lull
lntert
Wlllb
on 111
ful PI
WPI1
ma~
PIRG
recei\
Thts
fuA
I
..._Itt
Letters:
To --all campus organizations:
The supervisor responsible for the Worcester water
reservoirs in Holden came into my office at the en~ of Term DIn
with a handful of paper directional signs which had been posted an
near reservoir property. These were posted for use during I
fraternity sponsored bicycle event.
Since these signs were not removed after the event, they
blow around after falling off the trees on which they had been
He collected a dozen or more but many are probably still biOI. .
around the woods.
He asked if I would pass along to campus organizations hit,... .
for help in minimizing the liner which accumulates around the ,..~1
system. Since lliv~ in this area myself, I am well aware of the niM•
he and his staff have in keeping the area clean of debris. It's a
to pick up beer cans, papers, and other debris which if allowed •
cumulate could become a source of contamination of the WIW
drink on campus.
.
He is not asking that student organizations refrain from Ulln8
route for car rallyes, bicycle races, or any similar events. HOWIVIf,
would like to nave anyone desiring to post signs for such eventl
with him first and provide him assurance that they will be rlfl!l(lllll
immediately after the event, as well as any other litter which
from the event.
His is a reasonable request and I urge your cooperation. I
campus organization plans to hold any activity which will awtM·1~
ticipants through the area of the Worcester reservoir system, ~
me in the Public Relations Office. The reservoir supervisor is a
friend and I' ll be glad to help responsible campus groups arrange.for
permission for any reasonable request for placing directional liglll
such cases.
Let me take this opportunity to remind everyone that th<,uatllll'l•
disposal of rubbish from car windows is a major national probtefll·
problem solvers, let's each of us help solve this one by putting our
in proper containers and urging others to do likewise .
Roger N. Perry
Director of Public
flit••
...._ _...,.._......,._
....._
f
c
13, t9n
Page 3
NEWSPEAK
Pirg
speaks
The 1977·78 school year maries the first
lull year that the Massachusetls Pubhc
_.est Research Group ("Mass PIRG"I
.. be an active, fullv·funded organization
0111he WPI campus. Because of a success·
Ill pe11tion campatgn conducted by three
wPt students •n 1975. in whtch an absolute
..,Oty of the students asked to bring
IlliG on campus, Mass PtRG began to
_.,e fundtng in the Spring of last year.
Iii year, Mass PIRG wtll be devoting the
., time resources of one of its staff at
W111VS to the WorceS1er area. However,
,.rv students are s1ill unclear as to whet
MG IS, what it does, and how its activities
a.fit them.
PIRG is a student-suppor1ed, student·
ttcted, and professionally-staffed
-.nization that provides the opportunity
If students to become involved in en·
tillnfTiental and consumer assues In a very
fiCiical and meamngful way. h sometimes
a student to vvortc in an area that
his or her career choice after
and often provides useful
. ..,,.....,.,., for landing a job. Involvement in
projecll teaches a student valuable
. . ._.,....-inter•t skills that cannot be learned
p-Ed:
a classroom. Finalty, PlRG projects
students and the public at '-rge in
of beller consumer laws, wiser
.-nment policies, and more citizen input
Ill public deCision IT\at(ing processes.
s.uderlts who work on P1RG projects
Wthemselves researching the dangers of
or the ways by which auto
tilers evade their warranty obligations;
&1111.,.,...-;,
ll1tioltl
.._energy
1hey draft legitlation and lobby In the
statehouse for laws to hetp the consumer
chaHenge utilhy company rate increa.es;
they provide the public with valuable information on how to sue in smll claims
court or how lo avoid fraudulent saleS
practices of furniture dealers and other
merchants. It tS the atudenta themMives
who decide which projects will be undertaken and how they will be implemented, and it is the studeniS who do
1 he research, writing, speaking and
ivic Center bond
by D•vid C. PotftN
this month the fate of the proposed
. . msttton Worcester Civic Center will be
the second time tn the fonn of a
on the city election balloL The
tS whether the C'ity of Worcester
float a $7.9 milhon bond for the
of the civic center. The remaining
would be m the form of a $5 million
by the Federal Government and $2
coming from private interests.
Civtc Center would be located in the
of the Worcester Center. This
be about 20 minutes walking
from Tech The center would be
for musical concerts, sports, con·
and the like.
opinion that the $7.9 million bond
be a good, sound lnves1ment. The
that would be brought in by the·
should in all probability pay for
itself in a number of years. Also a considerable amount of jobs would be created
by such a complex. Also the Worcester
Center GalaTia is losing money. Such a
Civic Center could save them from a fate
comparable to Denholm's.
Of most importance to the WPI student
1s the entertainment aspect. If a student
wants 10 see a concert. they have to rety
on Tech or go to Boston, Providence, or
Springfield. Such a center would provide a
vtable alternative within walking distance.
Many WPI students are registered voters
m Worcester and I would urge them to vote
yes on election day. Even though you are
only here a shor1 while I would hope that
most of you would feel enough responSibility for the success of the city of
Worcester. The city in which your future
alma-mater resides in.
tudent Government
Student Government meeting of
22, 19n was called to order at 6:00
the Student Affairs office. The roll
laken The minutes were read and
111
Committee Reports
ic Committee - Dan Kenneflck
~el\n!~An committee chairman for next
Announce,.nts
left, Panek needs three names for the
Awards Committee as soon as
NttW Business
- 1n011on was made and seconded to
the proposed S.A.B. budgeL The
passed.
.
OldBusmess
was made and seconded to call
proposed
Social
Committee
-Amendment as a referen·
ouon passed Both the IRHC
and Social Referendums will be put to the
student body as amendments next year.
The Student Government meeting of
September 9, 1m was called to order at
7;00 p.m. in the Student Affairs Office. The
roll was taken. The minutes were read and
accepted.
0/dBUSIM$$
A motion was made to change the
eleclion procedure in the proposed Social
Commillee Amendment. The motion was
labfed until the next meeting.
Discussion
Dean Brown commented on both the
changes taking place with •he Pub
management and the deficit in the Peddler's budget The addition of $2 to the
social fee for the support of Mass. P.I.R.G.
was dlscuss..Jd. The commuter rep. asked
what the commuter fund was. He was
directed to go see Dean Sherer There is no
mdependenl rep yet for this year.
W'PI ME'WSPEAK
Qrgantzmg once a project is begun.
However. in an thae activities, students ate
supported by PIRG'a fuM-time staff of 13
ntofesst<>nals, anckJding heahh advocates,
~nergy specialists, l.wyers and social
c;cientists. This well·qualifted staff allows
students to become part of a statewide
organization that ia effective on the issues
from one year to the neiCt, a continuity and
c;cope no other student organization can
offer.
At WPI, students can become invofved
with PIRG in a number of ways. They can
volunteer any number of hours a week to
help organize petition drives, research an
•ssue area or write a PIRG report. They can
take part in an lOP project for which PIRG
serves as a prime resource. Or they can
help set the policy and goals of the
nraanlzation by serving on the local board
or 1he state Board of Directors. Even if a
student has but a few hours to contribute,
PIRG can involve that student in an in·
leresting and meaningful way.
When PIRG was first funded last spring,
students had the option of not supponing
PIRG simply by checking it off their bill and
deducting the $2 fee. This wn the method
agreed upon by PIRG, student leedera, and
the administration. However, becau• of a
misunderstanding in the accounting office,
the fee this tal waa automaticaly lncfuded
as part of the social aaMtiet fee, a general
lee that is uled to 8Uppor1 a number of
student organizations. ln order 10 remedy
this, PIRG will make refunds of the $2 fee
available to any student who doel not feel
•hat PIRG is an appt"Opriete object for
student support. Although no ott.
student organization offers a refund of their
portion of the social activities, PIRG feela
that students should have the option of
supporting us or not, and in the ~ring
funding will o~ again be by the check·off
method.
For those students who ere interested in
learning more about PIRG or becoming
llCtive, •he PIRG office is on the third floor
of Washburn, directly across from the lOP
offices.
Note: Charles Herak has been wortcing
since August 1 as PIRG's full-time staff
a11omey and organizer for the Worcester
:~rea .
Wind power
by .,ark Kelsey
One of the m6st Interesting alternative
sources of energy is the wind. Windpower
has many advantages it is free. its detivery
IS free, there is an mexhaustible supply of it,
and Jhere are no harmful waste products
discharged from lis generation. Windpower, however, also has some disadvantages: it can only be harnessed at
certain favorable sites: it is intermittent.
which makes it necessary to s•ore 'electricit y generated when the wind was
blowing; and an average annual wind
velocity of 30 m.p.h. is required for
economical power generation.
However, despite these disadvantages In
Jhe early 1940's, an aerogenerater of 1250
kw capacity was built and operated in
Vermont. ~!though it eventuelly failed due
10 a rotor blade breaking, It showed thet
wmdpower could produce electricity In
megawatt quantities. However, those of
you skeptics like the one captain of US
Industry who staled that "windpower
could never amount to more than a drop in
the buck6t" who still don't believe in the
potential of wmdpower, listen to thlsl In
nne <~tate alone, Wisconsin, there is an
estimated total kinetic energy averaging
353~t106 megawatts per year. If only 0.1 per
cent of this annual yield were extracted,
about 30 billion kilowatt-hours and if thia
amount of energy was one per cent of the
annual yield It would be 300 billion kilowatt·
hours. certainly more than a mere "drop in
the bucket."
Therefore, I must conclude that the US
should increase its effons to make u• of
windpower and develop its u• through
using storage systems or through combinations with hydroelectric power plants.
Obviously, windpower cannot be the
solution of aH solutions to our energy
problems, but as I have stated previoutly
the US has such an energy problem that We
cannot afford to pick and choose one main.
energy allemative, we must expand on aH
fronts.
Sources: Ene~gy R&D and National
Progr~ss,
prepared
for
the lnterdepanmental Energy Study by the
Energy Study Group under the direction of
Alt Bulent Cambef. p.334.
Perspectives on Entt~gy, ed; Lon, C.
Ruedisili, Moms W . Firebaugh. (Oxford
University Press~ New York, 1975. p.365.1
Is desperate.
We badly need help - writers,
..
photographers, layer-outers. Our present staff Is slowly degenerating, our ~xslstance
Is threatened, If you don't help. Come, save our sanity.
P gc.;
Search
Attention:
• • •
continued from page
o nomtnauons from all per1inent sources,
he commtttee would also like the student
hody to have a voice in the selectton, and is
tnV!ttng responsible suggestions from any
student. Anyone mterested in nominating
!lualified persons should contact Dan
Bnhz, secretary of the committee.
Thus far, the response to the com·
mutee's search has paid off. Approximately
220 cand•dates are under consideration at
\
Tuesday, September
NEWSPEAK
BABSON COLLEGE
October20
BOSTON UNIVERSITY
November10
New Pub Manager
by Jean M . Mamn
The new students here at WPI are not
alone tn trytng 10 comprehend this
campus The manager of the Pub is also a
freshman. or more accurately, a transfer
student,
Glenn Deluca has expenence working in
college pubs. For a year he was at UConn,
ftrst as thetr pub's assistant managctr then
<IS manager. Before that he recetved an MA
from UConn, en the field of Higher
Educatton - Student affairs. He com·
ml'nted that the Pub at UConn is also run
by the s udent activities office, but the pub
here ts one and a half times larger, with a
much smaller student body.
Uke the freshmen, Mr. Deluca is learn·
ing fast. He arnved here Frtday, September
2 and had to have the Pub open the next
day So far, hiS life here has revolved
around WPI. Currently, he is staymg ir.
Htggins House and workrng a 12 hour day.
"I enjoy it here. I Just WISh I had had more
une before I had to stan," he commented.
Mr. Deluca does not stay behind his
deslt all the time - "The manager's job Is
multifaceted." To get a better feel for
operating the pub he does everything:
"poor beer, pass bottles, doing paper work,
mingling " The mrnghng is important,
although he doesn't pany all night. "I have
o have a rapport with the people. If
someone has had too much, I have to be
able to go out and talk 10 them."
NORTHWESTERN
UNIVERSITY
October 14
oub lacks both. But Mr. Deluca added lhat
bathroom is being added under the small
room and he wants to " look into cooling."
Mr Deluca's expenence also lies in
other fields. AI UConn, he was greatly
involved in s1uden1 acltvities, as he plans to
be here. not JUSt the Pub, but other areas as
well He was also 1n student affa•rs In his
undergraduate years at the State University
of New York at Stonybrook. In particular,
he worked on the Act ton Line, a question complaint research group, acting for the
students with the administration and
faculty.
When asked about prospective changes
in the Pub, Mr. Deluca replied that it was
hard 10 say. He is working wtth the social
commrt tee about bringing in live groups,
also there is a possibility that the Pub itsetf
w•ll bring in a few groups. According 10 Mr.
Deluca. "1he pub isn' l just a student Pub,
it's a community Pub. It is open in the
afternoon for the students and faculty to
mix. I plan to take slaps to provide for more
intermrngling ".He later added that most of
the changes in the Pub will be tn the office,
on the management Side of the bar.
Commenting that, while working with all
lhe consHuction going on is difficult, it is
more rewarding. " I lhink that pan of the
enjoyment is the challenge, it's new to me,
and I'll have to use my know-how to make
r:hanges. I have to learn the operation, juS1
because I've been in ,._.e business before,
tha• doesn'l make me a complete expert each Pub •s different."
Unlike the studenls who need pass only
nne competency exam, Glenn Deluca has
one nrghtly.
11
Plans are now being made to replace the
$ystem The Social Committee has been
•llloted $3000 to do this. According 10 Peter
Kent, Social Committee Chairperson there
are two possible allernauves.
The ftrll is to buy a hi·fidelity system.
Th1s would be somewhat like the old
!lystem that was stolen. The second
alternative, whtch Mr. Kent favors, is to
seek out a more durable and secure system.
Th1s 1s so that the system. will last and not
he as easy 10 steal.
Mr. Kent expressed hrs opimon that 1 ht·
ltdehty system •s not suitable for the Pub.
There are 1wo ma1or reasons for this. The
first is that the Pub's physical layout is not
that well suited for this type of sys1em. The
second is rhat the type of audience that
would be danc1ng to the system would not
requtte 1hat exact music reproduction.
Though Mr. Kent favors the durable and
c;ecure system a dectsion has not been
made He expressed that much more input
from WPI students is needed for the for·
rnulation of a committee to study the
nroblem.
Bids have been sought out and received.
One company even offered to take the old
· speakers as a rrade '"· But the ftnal decision
will be more of a group decision rather than
one person's idea of what the system
should be. This is so that the mistakes and
secrecy which went along wrth the buying
n f l he laal syatem w1ll be avo•ded.
New WACCC toy
by Ray Aubert
If you happened to m•ss it, WPI now has
1 new computer system to replace the
Socctra 70 46 computer that was'lnstaned
11 1969 The new system tS the Untvac 90rl() v.h1ch •s bwlt by the Sperry Rand
Corporatton, Sperry Umvac D1vtsion
There are many advantages to the
UnMIC 90 60 system wh1ch makes 11 more
nrac 1ca1 han tho Spectra 70·46 The
t IQctest C1vantage •s t1c latest technology
ha•• mo111des Students no onger have to
•'Nl w h a svstcm that 1, g behtnd tn
BeiYedere II
.••, '200!
radio, w-w Qrpet, new fnlll ._,
cover, power steeriftg, ...,. .._,
brakes, 4 dr., VI, I'UftS.
Must sell befon ,....,,....
KMot flUs Sept.
Contact: Leslie
UNIVERSITY OF DENVER
October 11
Save on Calculator·.;
The largest se
of hard alumino•
MEASURING
.
In the co····...
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•
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.....,.,... __ ,__. . . . c..-. . .
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,.__.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _ _ t .....
The pub stereo
by David Potter
As most of the WPI community knows.
most of the Pub stereo system was stolen
last Winter. Only the speakers and the
TEAC lape player were left behind.
'II Plrm••
schools will be Interviewing on
the WPI ampus. Pl..,. sign up
for int..-views In the Office of
Gr.-du..te and C..reer p&..ns betwMft the hours of 1:30 .-.m . .-nd
5:10p.m. We are ~Gated In the
Wuhburn Building- 3rd floor.
NORTHEASTERN
UNIVERSITY
November11
The Pub, although large, does have some
drawbacks. " There's no second enuance
to the small room, so you could open just
that when tl's slow." Also inadequate are
l he bathroom and cooling facilities - the
FOR SALE
SENIORS
The following lisr of gr•du•t•
tu.. 1mc Soon the commtttee wtll
,.,hminate all but a small group of nominee~ .
Fro m lhts group three to ftve finalists are to
he chosen by December. The finalists wtll
undergo rigorous scrutiny by the committee, including a two day interview of
P.ach on campus earty next year.
8a$8d on the Interviews, the committee
1s expected to make its final choice. and
submit the name of WPI's next president
for apprcval by the board of trusteet on
February 18, 1978.
technology.
Another •mportant advantage to lhe
Un•vac 90 60 15 low cost overhead Stnce
•he untt tS c:maller, 1t rcqutres ress cooling
•han the older unu In add11ton, the 90 60
has an tnput speed four t1mes faster than its
predecessor, maktng lor loss backlog
Turnaround lime has been reduced 10 thrte
hours. hree ttmes a day If 11 JOb of lffl.s
han ftvc mtnUies IS submrllod, lurnaround
1m~ ts one hour Ther are al:.c plans to in
tall 1 romo1e J<>b entry 10 the near future
Th1s would enable balch Jobs 10 be entered
hy Sllt<lcnts 1ns1cad of opercuors.
IT Nil TilE
Air Force ROTC has scholerships,
allowances and joba tor Mlected
. sc•ence and engineering ma)ors.
Air Force ROTC has openlncts for
young men and women matorlng
tn specified science and
eng~neerlng
acedemle fleldl Fields
such as Aeronautical. Aerospace.
General and Electrical EngineerIng, Mathematics, PhySics and
Computer Technology. AFROTC
enrollment paya well now and
could keep paying off in the
future.
Air Force ROTC offers 4-year.
3-year and 2-year scholarships
weth $100 monthly tax-free
allowance. AFROTC also offers the $100 tax-fr"
monthly allow•nce dunng
the last two years to nonscholarshtp students.
Upon graduation you'll
recetve a commtssion In
the U.S . Air Force and
compete tor challengtng
JObs. There·u be numerous opportunttles for
advanced educatton
In your ~teld. plus
you'll have flnanctal
securtty and start your
way up the promotion
ladder where your abtltty
and amb1tton are the only
hmtts
It pays to be '" demand,
and •f you're the type
we're lOOking for, tt pays
to get the detatls No
Oblrg&IIOns, naturally
13
NEWSPEAK
lOP topics
NSF funding
The Neuonal Science Foundation with
he cooPeration of the W.P.I. Projects
Office haS invited teams Of juniors and
sernors 10 submit proposals for research
~ts to be funded by the Student(lriginiated Studies Program. The purpose
rJ the S.O.S. program is to provide teams
o1 rwa to 10 undergraduate students with
;aperienca in Independent. self-directed
ltludv in which they initiate, plan, and direct
~heir own research activities with minimal
...,eMs~on.
LJit year, the NSF through the S.O.S.
funded 64 projects with an
,-age budget of $14,000; the NSF plans
fund atapproximately the same level this
10
,_r. This program provides an excellent
apponunlty tor a group of students to
conduct preliminary research for
iheir MOP or lOP work. or for students to
111end thetr research efforts beyond their
IIQP or lOP.
The S.O.S. Program is aimed at those
undergraduate students who have com
pleled the major part of their basic course
WOIIt tn. science or mathematics, who can
IIYill an interdisciplinary approach to
iDMng a research problem, and who can
._..ully direct and coordinate their
"'" efforts in research.
Students interested in submitting
jJOPOS81s for S.O.S. grants should begin by
~loping a group of upper division
~udents tnto a team of five to ten students,
identify a research problem with an
~iplinary approach to solving that
problem, and finally locate a faculty advisor
~ to work with the students on the
problem. The grant will cover stipend
11pp0r1 for students up to $90.00 per week
Ill' student tor up to twelve weeks, and
~!*~ling expenses which may Include
~j~Plies, field expenses, travel, clerical
IMCeS, faculty salaries, insurance, and
!'f09rBITI
"her
-.en
Page 5
Completed proposals will be due at the
Project Office on Friday, October 28, 19n
before 4 p.m. The ProJects Office staff will
be responsible for submitting the correct
number of coptes of the proposal by the
NSF deadline of November 4, 1977
To assist students in preparing their
proposals and to cover some of the lm·
portent details regarding proposal
gUidelines, format, and contents, Dean
Lutz has scheduled a seminar for interested
students and faculty on Monday, September 19, 1!177 at 4:00p.m. in the D.I.A.
Conference Room on the third floor of the
Washburn Shops. AssiS1ing Dean Lutz at
this session will be Professor James
Demetry and Dean Edward Clark. The
format for the seminar will be very informal,
and s1udents will be invited to ask any
questions per1inent to their S.O.S.
proposals.
The S.O.S. proposals should reflect that
the students understand the interdisciplinary approach to the problem and
lt'le solution. that the problem has lm·
mediate relevance to society, that the
problem will require the generatton of
meaningful data relevant to the technical or
scientific pro.blem, and that the protect is
truly student·originated and student
directed research Furthermore, the
propose! should tndicate clearly that faculty
advice is available and that the resource be
identified in those subject-fields where
need is likely to arise.
The proposals submitted under S.O.S.
will be evaluated by a panel of scientists
who will rate the relative merits of the
proposals submitted. Notification of grant
awards will be made on February 10, 1978.
Any student or group of students having
questions about the S.O.S program should
contact either Dean Lutz at the Project
Center or Professor Demetry at the lOP
Center.
•
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL CLUB - ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING
Tuesday, September 13
4:00P.M.
Sue CMprun's Office- Alumni Gym
a
some
'
unposst
Having problems ftndtng a topic for your
Interactive Oualtfytng Project (lOP)? A new
resource and materials file system at the
lOP Center on the third floor of the Wash·
bum Shops might be the place 10 look for
possible lOP topics.
Over the summer. the staff of the lOP
Center has gathered together a large
in format ion,
r~ports,
a moun 1 of
newsletters, position papers, and research
reports from many governmental agencies,
public interest groups, and research
agencies or foundations. All this material
was categorized according to the lOP Code
Area topics, and placed in individual file
boxes. This file can be found in the workconference area of the lOP Center.
The materials and resources file was
developed tn order to serve as a clearing
house for the large amount of information
that comes to various members of the
faculty and administration at W.P.I. Some
of this material is of special interest to
several of the lOP code areas in that the
material represents reports or newsletters
of the major governmental agencies
working tn the area, espec,ially on problem
related to energy and the envtronment.
Other files contain bibliographical material
on that code area. or materials discussing
current tssues or trends within that lOP
Code Area. This file system represents the
Apathy, CSU sty/~ .
by Cl1fford A. Welch
(CPS! - There is a story circulating in
Californta about how the governor, Jerry
Brown, has indicated he feels student
elections on the 19 campuses of the
California State University (CSUl system
are not representative of the entire student
body and so. newspapers have alleged,
Brown will not sign state bills granting the
CSU student governments more power.
That story is erroneous, the state
legislative advocate of the CSU student
body says, and shows how far a few loose
word$ can go.
The story stems from a Brown veto of a
bill. co-sponsored by the CSU student
governments, which called for a ceiling
raise on the maximum amount of money
which could be used by student govern·
ment for "the student body, itt buildings
and operating fees," according to the
official synopsis of the bill.
Brown's veto message was short; h was
the second time he's reviewed and vetoed
such legislation. The veto reads, "In view of
the small turnout at S1udent elections, I
remain unpersuaded of the merits of
doubling student body fees to construct
student union buildings."
Apparently, CSU legislative advocate
Sco11 Plotkin explained. the veto was interpreted by many as a sign that unless
more students voted in elections of their
student government leaders, Brown
wouldn't approve any legislation granting
students more power.
The bill under question would have given
the student governments of each campus
discretionary powers over deciding how
much to raise the student fees of their
campus and on how 10 use the increased
revenue.
However. Plotktn satd, the bill was
specifically designed to raise money for the
Call: 75Z·7Z09
Roo~
28A
construclton and operation of student
union butldings on the five CSU campuses
whtch have none now. (The other 14
campuses already have student unions).
Brown's veto then, Plotkin made clear, was
drawn from Brown's now-famous "era of
limitations. lowered expectations" theme in
that the student leaders of these five
campuses could make do with meeting in
any available space tnstead of haVIng to
build their own offtce.
CSU student government leaders are
concerned about thts, said Plotkin, but
instead of concentrating on ways 10 pass a
similar bill, they are now looking for
techniques to inaease voter tumout.
The highest turnout of any state campus
was recOfded at the Chico campus of CSU,
according to the Chico student body
prestdent. Twenty·eight per cent of the
student body voted in the associated
student election there. Many of the student
body presidents feel this is an adequate
number, especially conSidering that Brown
was elected by only 38 per cent of en
exceedingly high 60 per cent turnout of
regtstered vo1ers in 1974.
Plotkin seid that the student presidents
hadn't come up with any definite plans yet,
but were considering methods of stan·
dardizing student elections on all cam
puses They may put ballots in the
registration material sent to each student,
for tnstance, in order to prove that
everyone was given a chance to vote. That
way, Plotkin said, he could reasonably
argue with Brown that the students which
rhdn't vote were actually making an active
political decision.
It remains !o be seen whether Brown's
vqto on increasing funds for student union
facilillcs actually expresses the rumored
suspicion that he ts taking power away
from the student government.
adidas·-~~
PCJiilf
The thrill of rappelling off a fifty.fcx>t tower. The
breathtaking excitement of riding the rapids. The adventure
of climbing mountainous terrain.
Impossible to experience? Not if YWJ. add Army
ROTC to your campus life.
@Army ROTC.
Learn wbat ft takes to lead.
ulforts of lhe lOP Center staff to get thts
tmportant resource material out to the
students who would benefit most from an
examtnation of thec;e materials.
All the articles in the files are available to
students and faculty, and may be taken
from the Center for a penod of two weeks,
on a loan basis. Tbe files will be available
for students during the regular hours
posted for the lOP Center, that is, Monday
through Friday 8:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m.,
Saturday 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., and
Sunday 1:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.
As a fun her aid ro students using the lOP
Center Resource and Materials File, a listing
of the lOP Code Areas accompanied by a
brief description of each of the lOP Code
Areas has been posted next to the file
shelves.
At this time. several of the areas, most
notably those dealing with energy, the
enwonment, the impact of science and
technology on culture and values contain
an unusually large amount of materials and
resources
In order to con1inue to keep the files up
to date, the staff of the lOP Center en·
courage faculty or administration who
rece•ve matenals that they feel woutd be of
value to the resource system to forward
that material to Dennis Lipka, at the lOP
Center.
JOGGING ·TENNIS
No Selea Tex
Check• Accepted
with Student 10
'S
HUSTON
BASKETBALL-CASUALS
Men'..S Sizes 4'h ·l5, Women' s Sizes 4-11
WOICESTUCINTII
Levei·S."th Ma•
IANICAMUICUO.MASTEI CHA8GI
SHeet
HIGHLAND PHARMACY
104 HIGHLAND STREET
WORCiiSTER, MASS.
PHOIIE 158-0594
Harrington Auditorium
10% DISCOUNT
on most druo storA nf'f'c:fc \AJi1'h
\.1\/Pt
•
n
Pa~
6
NEWSPEAK
Modern dance club
A new club activity in modern dance,
open to both men and worr.,n, will begin
this semester! 11 is a complete beginner's
course. and a very relaxing form of exercise. Faculty and administration are also
welcome to participate. The instructor,
Joyce Rosen, also teaches at Clark
University and Holy Cross College.
Modem dance has often been confused
with ballroom or jazz dance, but it is much
like theater in that it Is an improvisational
art; its techmque sprang up from pure
movement
improvisation, and its
choreographers continue the -lth
indiVIdualized, soul-motivated daf'ICII. Ia!
A meeting with th_e instructor will be held
lor tnterested men and women on Tue.dly
September 13, at 4:30 p.m. in the
Gym Conference Room where a dance flrn
"A Dancers World" by Martha G~hlm
be shown. The first class ia tenflliwlly
scheduled for Wednesday, Septtfnber 14
from 7:00 - 9:00 p.m. Classes will be Wieldy
and PE 1000 credit is available.
'
At the conclusion of "8" Term, h il
hoped that an informal performance Cln be
presented.
Altinni
wi
Anderson appointed
Robert A. Anderson of 'J7 Ardmore Road
has been appointed assistant alumni
director at Worcester Polytechnic Institute,
according to Stephen J. Hebert, alumni
director, University Relations.
He will be responsible for providing staff
support for the regional alumni clubs and
the newly Inaugurated alumni admissions
program while also being actively involved
tn alumni fund raising. He will continue to
coach the JV basketball team at WPI.
A Worcester native, Anderson was
graduated from Colby a year ago and while
there was ac1ive as an un~
leader. He was president of the 11uc11n1
body in his senior year. A four-...._,
he was co-captain of the Colby Vlllily
basketball team in his senior year
member of Alpha Tau Om&Qa frttlmlty.
He ts the son of Mr. and Mrs. lJowod
Anderson and a graduate of Bumcoet
SeniOf High, Worcester. He 111
assistant basketball coach at WPI lilt
season and will continue these dulill in
addition to his new assignment for the ftiXt
college year.
and-·
WPI Parking and traffic regulations
These regulations are made for the
convenience of all so that the limited
parktng facilittes will be available to faculty,
admin1strahon and students who are entilled 10 park on campus.
These regulations apply to faculty, staff
and students and are in effect throughout
the year. These rules also apply during
night study and summer school programs.
PARKING RULES
1. Only motor vehicles displaying a current
and properly color-coded decal are
permilled to use the designated areas
on the campus. The decel should be
placed on the inside of the rear window
on the right or curb side of the vehicle.
The veh1cle ts not considered registered
unless the decal 1s visible.
2. New decals must be obtained each year
by faculty, staff and students by fthng
an appltcation with the Campus Police
Office. A driver's ' license and
automobile reg•stration are necessary.
Replacement of lost decals tssued
during the year Is free.
3 Parking Areas: Vtsitors Circle (around
flag pole) reserved for outside visitors
only.
a Cast Campus lot (off Boynton
S1reet, behtnd L1braryl open to faculty,
students and staff with grey parking
decals. Overflow from other lots may
park here regardless of decal color.
b. lot between Salisbury and Atwater
Kent - for faculty and staff only with
orange decals.
c. lot behind Goddard Hall - Faculty
and staff only with white decals.
d. WeS1 Campus Parking Lot - For
students, faculty and staff wtth yellow
decals. Baptist Church lot and Dover
Street lot are avatlable with brown
decal required; cross registrants may
use these lots.
e. Stoddard - Blue decals only.
f. Ellsworth Parking Lot Green
decals only.
g Fuller Parktng Lot - Red decals
only.
h. Front of Atwater Kant - Faculty
and s1aff orange decals only.
i. Higgins House - Light Blue decals
only.
Note: Cars w1th improp8f'ly colored
decals will be considered illegally
parked If found in campus parking
areas other than assigned, except for
overflow parking tn the East Campus
101.
4. Cars must be parked enlirely within lined
parkmg spaces. An improperly parked
car 1n 1he adjacent space does not
constitute an excuse for straddling the
pamted line.
5 Students from other Consortium schools
parking at WPI on other than a onetime basis are required to register (no
fee charged! with the WPI Campus
Pol.ce .
6 No campers may be parked on campus.
7 A!l motorcycles must be parked behind
H1ggms Laboratory.
8 No ov~rntght parkmg IS permitted on the
East, West. Goddard or Atwater Kent
lots except for emergency situations, In
which case the Campus Police must be
notified
9. A three inch snow fall will require
plowmg operations. This may take
place between 5:00 p.m. and 8:00 a.m .
on weekdays and from noon on
Saturday to 8.00 a.m . on Monday on
weekends. NO vehicle will be allowed
to be left on campus overnight unless
the Campus Police Office has been
notified and proper arrangements have
been made
10 Improperly parked vehicles will be
towed away and stored at the owner's
expense. in accord w1th Mass General
Laws, Chapter 537, Section 120D.
REGISTRATION OF VEHICLES
All students at the college with motor
vehicles and - or motorcycles must register
them with Campus Police whether per·
mtfled to park on campus or not. No fee
charged unless parking decal is issued.
Decals will cost $5.
A regtstration deposit of $25.00 will be
required in addtlion to the decal fee. This
deposit will be the registrant's account
against which traffic fines will be deducted
Thts deposit is returnable at the year's end,
less deductions. Drivers not mamtaining an
account will be subject to forfeit of their
decal. However, Faculty and Staff electing
not to mamtain a regiStration deposit, will
have unpatd fines deducted from their next
pay check, in accord with their agreement
10 abide by WPI traffic regulations.
Regtstrants are responsible for all
violations involving a motor vehicle bearing
their decal registration and number,
regardless of who the operator is or
whether the car has been sold or loaned.
TRAFFIC RULES:
1 Campus speed limit is 15 mph.
2. Observe campus signs: Stop, Do Not
Enter, One Way, Etc.
3. The Institute assumes no responsibility
for fire, theft or other damages to
motor vehicles or personal property.
4 . Driving or parking on walks, paths and
normal lawn areas ts prohtbited.
5. Obstrucllng entrances and loading areas
1s prohibited.
6 Motorcycles and motorscooters are
prohibited on EAST Campus.
Motorcycles are to be parked on the
west stde of Higgins Laboratory.
7. Repainng, washmg or waxmg motOr
vehicles on either EAST or WEST
Campus •s prohibited.
8. The college has the legal right to order
cars towed away and stored at owner's
expense, but under ordinary circumstances. it is hoped that the
tssuance. enforcement and collection
of tickets and fines should be sufficient
c;anction to deter violation.
9 Any area NOT MARKED within parking
lines is a NO PARKING area.
10. No overnight parking is permitted on
the EAST or WEST Campus except for
emergency sttuations in which the
Campus Police must be notified.
11 . Follow 1raffic flow designated by signs
or arrows.
FEES AND PENAL TIES
Registration decal for motor vehicles
(Faculty and Staff exempt as staff benefit)
- $5.00.
UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS: Fresh·
men who are living in the dorms are not
permilled to have cars or any type of motor
vehicle on campus. A sophomore, junior or
senior living in the dormitories or within one
half mile of the campus as designated on
the map in the Campus Police Office may
bring a motor vehicle to college but will not
be permifled to park on campus other than
in Stoddard, Dover, 81sworth and Fuller
lots with properly colored decal.
All graduate students and assistants may
obtatn decals regardless of where they live,
but they must park in lots according to their
color code
REGISTRATION HOURS: 8:00a.m. to 3:30
p.m. at the Campus Police Office, Stratton
Hall
REQUIRED INFORMATION· Driver's
license. vehicle registration, and a student
idenlificatton card.
NOTE Any student permitted to have a
motor vehicle. on or off campus, which Is
licensed outside the state of Massachusetts
MUST fill out a Non resident Student
Vehicle lnformatton Form. V~thich can be
obtained from the Campus Police Office.
This is required by the laws of the Commonweal! h and no fee IS charged for this
state decal.
..
Fines for violations of Traffic Rulli No.2.
4, 5, 6, 8, 9 and 10 (If paid within 7 dlyal-
$3'.00
(If not paid within 7 days) - $10.00.
Other penalties: Parking a non·
authorized vehicle - $10.00.
Snow Removal violation - t10.00
Speeding or operattng negfiQifldv $10.00.
Giving false address for purpoee d
obtatmng a WPI parking permit - t2S.01
Parking fines wtll be paid at the Campus
Police Office.
Failure to pay fines will result in loll of
driving and parking pnvileges on the
campus Loss of privileges does not CIIICIII
liability lor fines The Campus Police
w1ll refer all vtolations not paio to IN
Accounting Office for collection.
S1uden1s who fail to pay Will not b1
ehgible to regtster or to receive diploma
transcnpts, or other official docu"*.l1 "
service of 1he college.
The Campus Police Office is au ·
to obtain listings from the Registry
Motor Vehicles and assess char~ to
v1olator.
General Notes of Traffic and P.,tlng:
These regulations are subject to r
at any time. Cttang8$, if any, will be
on campus buUet&n boards, publiihed In •
WPI Newspeak and in Monday Mlmo,
Changes will take effect when ~
Sep tember 13, 19n
NEWSPEAK
Page 7
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HEWLETT' PACKARD
NEWSPEAK
f'agc 8
THE PARABLE
Oel was strange. No doubt about it. He
always did things backwards He would
'klaw' down the street instead of 'walk'
down the sHeet . Needless to say, this was
trreguler (All his verbs are backwards)
Oel never saw one for Rniog out. He
always deyats '" the house. Could you
blame him~ But this was bad, because Oel
always lief that life was passing him by.
Oel tog derit of being bored. He dedlced
he saw gniog ol og to the high school
dance, no matter what might happen. A d
•
so he tes about ot teg ready.
He wenk he dedeen a date. Glenda was
his only friend. He dediced he dluow ksa
her She said yes.
As the 'btg' mght drew near, Oel saw
nervous. How dluohs one tea on a date?
After aU, he dah never neeb on one before.
He dediced he dluow yalp it bX ear.
But the mght of the dance went fine.
Glenda and Oel had-dah a great time. The
evening seemed made for pleasure.
As Oel thguorb Glenda home, he
derednow if he dluohs ssik her goodnight. •
11 plagued hiS mtnd so. that he ciediced he
dluow.
And as they stood-doots on the front
sreps, he tneb forward and dessik her.
Nothing passionate, just simple. And as he
left . Glenda whispered, " Good·night, Leo."
And they lived happily ever after.
mj
Tuesday, September 13, 19n
SECURITY
Rain drops cloak
fall trees in veils
of intricate patterns
while inside, I
sleep
with you, peacefully,
your arms form a roof
about my head that
no distress
can enter.
-F. Alberto
There was a dog that watd*
the hogs but .he got all tied liP
His mouth got dry and he_..
to cry, and he drank sevtn-41P.
- Billy Heberlnl
WHAT IS A FRIENDSHIP
Memories of a happy time,
Fleeting in mind.
A smiling face
That say's
''You are part of me"
Has never turned my way.
Many times I have tried,
But to no avail.
Fallen from the hearts of many
THE TRUTH
The Truth has begun and has ended with a passtng of time and
life. Lies have forged the shackles which bound us to ourselves a~d
which remove us from humanities embrace. Truths have become Ires
and lies truths. Time itself has become warped because man has
refused to see that which is before him. Beliefs have no meaning and
morality no definition. All is shrouded in a veil of confusion . MAN , AS
MAN WAS MEANT TO BE, IS DEAD . THE TRUTH HAS BEEN LOST.
Basic
Without leaving a mark,
While my own shows painful scars.
What is a friendship?
Is it sharing 7
Is it taking?
Does this also apply to the hurt of the end7
Not for me.
I get it all.
And I try again.
Always.
--
ltn
tuesdaY. Sep1ember 13, 19n
NEWSPEAK
emu 1onally calibrated 1o 1he time of day
mrt 1he decor. All was Silent, vast, and
wh1 e
N •r..ous. Floyd tried the nearest door, 11
I d open 1he moment he touched 11. A
pro g•rl with cybernetic eyes sat sm1llng
b htnd a desk She chrrped " Hi, can I help
y l?.
Floyd flushed. " I jus1 want a momAnt."
'Oh, you want Ego Gratification," she
ephed. " That depar1ment is across the
hall."
"Sorry," Floyd mumbled. Across the hall
how had he missed it?
was a huge,
oval, gill· framed mirror. He smiled at his
refleclton and the mirror slid away,
revealing a lush, velvety red hallway. At the
end of that hallway he found an even
pretlier girl smiling at him.
Floyd has his moment
by Doreen Pendergast
The lush saccharine strains of Mantovani
~
triumphantly within the habitation
.adule. Floyd s1uffed the white robe into a
1nwn paper bag and sang along ...
"'nce in a lifetime, a man has a moment,
That wonderful moment when fate tak'tS
Ill hind ... "
_lerribly off key. But it didn't maner; he
Ml't have an audience - yet. He grinned
• Iii pate gangling reflection In the wall
llllfOr, switched off Mantovani and the
_.,ambience unit and went off to work.
Ab\111on for the lights. One for the door.
T.,for the elevator. Another button to hail
alubtHranspor1 module. 1wo more to code
hll dellination, another to activate the
toeen facing his seat. A dial to code the
news: Today il's Aoydl , flashed the screen,
end he couldn't resist nudging the sleepy
llllior chizen next 10 him. " That's mel"
Floyd sa1d exciledly, pointing to his screen.
The semor ci tizen smiled wryly. " Aren't
a bit young?"
"Young?" Floyd frowned. On the senior
citizen's v1ewscreen. a while-haired old
lldy gummed a banana. The senior citizen
lllned closer to the screen, delighted.
Royd nudged him again. " I want to make
lUre I have one. I don't want to wake up on
my eu1hanasia day and realize I never had
one moment. There's ten billion people in
ihe world, almoS1 nobody gets one
nowadays. Did you ever have one?"
YOU
"Not the kind you're getting. We did
.._. d1fferen1ly m my day. They didn't
' - every1h1ng automated."
"ReaMy? What was it like?"
The old lady was unwrapp1ng a distinctly
-~• ~lollipop. The sen1or citizen twisted a
..IIIII ilab, enlarg1ng the image. " What was it
It? Damned if I remember."
Aoyd shrugged and changed channels
Ill his own
screen. Clutching his paper bag
thighs, he gazed enviously at
lilt finals of lhe Tenth Sexual Olympics. In
hast purple padded arena, thousands of
limous people watched breathless as a
~e. well-endowed man and an
"*'vbeautiful woman coupled gracefully
Ill the flood lit stage. while The Hollywood
Snngs Strained feebly through the audio
~ce, drizzling·
Once 1n a lifetime. a man has a moment,
That wonderful moment when fate takes
Ill hand ... "
lillween hts
The lube transport module sneezed 10 a
011 Floyd SWitched off his screen and
"nt OUt •nto the crowded station The
~flashed the news: 'Today it's Floyd!'
S e~t Goldman signs compulsory
~-*zat1on Billl' 'Food Riots in China.
a, Africa. Europe! ' ' Earthquake
::aStates Soul hern Californta Fish
IT!st Today it's Floyd, at 12.151'
The elev~ttor moverl slowly, "Floyd ?
:::1k•nd of a name 1S that?" someone
tau Although it was too crowded to turn
1ha~and
address the votce. Floyd said
1s rne1 Are you going to watch?"
ru 01 course I'll watch." the voice
..,~ "It's compulsory You watch or
~~~ back a week's worth of food
1
:Vd
~0
1
Stopped smthng " Why don't you
watch?" he sa1d, flushing. "Is it so
•o ask~ Jus1 one moment?"
" They're screwing us." the voice replied.
" Food s1amps. Water S\amps. Transport
stamps. Taxes! If you're a pound over·
weight, they tax you. If you have kids, they
tax you. If you have sex, protected or not,
no mat1er where you do it; they'll know and
they'll lax you. Don't think Goldman won't
sign that b~ltaxing the air you breathe; he'U
do it I They'll never stop looking for another
way to screw us. This thing about watching
some fool like you or paying a whole
goddamn WEEK of food stamps; that's just
anolher way· to screw us!"
Aoyd bit his lip, hugged the paper bag to
his ches1. " I don' l care," he said softly. The
elevator stopped at his floor. People
crowding in, people crowding out. Tall,
short, black. While, old, young. all faceless,
hundreds of people. People like buttons:
hundreds. thousands, millions of buttons;
bu11ons pressed to order, buttons pressed
until they broke. Buttons beading the hide
of 1he monstrous machine of the world.
Each button untque only because it was
THIS bolton and not THAT button; it had
THIS function, not THAT function. Dull.
blank buuons responding only when
pushed. Bright blinking buttons pushed
until they became dull and blank. Buttons
thai only glowed for a moment. Buttons
that existed as part of, in servitude to, as
replaceable component of the machine.
Aoyd hurried lhrough lhe crowd,
pressed more buttons for another tubetransport module, pressed one more at his
office d()()(. He sat down in his cushioned
while chair m his white·walled windoWless
s1x·foot cubicle and faced his digital clock,
his view-screen, and his keyboard with the
three buttons: off, on and deviation. He
pressed 'on'; like 'off', the button stayed
dull while. A line graph appeared on the
screen. wilh one red line skiing slowly up
and down through horizontal green lines. If
the red line changed direction, he pressed
'deviation'; the button would glow for a
brief moment of amber glory. Sometimes
Jhe line changed direction every five
minutes; sometimes it never changed.
Aoyd had no idea what the graph and
1he line dep1c1ed. He'd been watching it for
ten years now, ever since he was twenty.
He used to stop people in the hallway and
ask them what 1he graph was for, and why
he had to press the button 1f the line
deviated, and what would happen if he
d1dn't press it - bul nobody knew, cared,
or wanted to be bothered.
" Floyd, is it really you?" she gushed.
taking his hand. " We've been waiting for
you. Did you bring a change of clothes?"
Aoyd hugged the paper bag to his cheat,
blushing. " This is for the momena"
" The one and only, just for you," the gii1
hatf·sang. dragging him Into another room.
" You can change here and I'll tell you
anything you want to know. Do you know
what you're going to do?"
Aoyd stared at her. " I think I just
changed my mind. You're the pre111est girt
I've ever seen in my life. I love you. I'd
rather you came up with me and had sex
with me."
" Oh. but I can't," she ttmiled sadly. " It's
your moment. Aoyd. You must have
starved most of your life to be able to pay
for the chance to have it. And you won it;
lhey picked YOU. It JUSt wouldn't be fair if I
was to share It with you. Floyd, just think,
millions of people are going to be watching
you. You don't want anything to distract
your allention from that. Besides, I'm not
programmed for it. Go, Aoyd; go change,
so you can have your moment."
Aoyd shrugged and pulled the white
robe out of his paper bag, then unzipped
his suit. The girl watched him with interest.
" What ere you going to do?" she said.
Aoyd had never undressed In front of a
girl bef ore. What with saving up for this
moment and the tax on sax. he was still a
virgin. "Oh," he mumbled, avoiding her
eyes. " Well ...what does anybody do?"
"You know," she shrugged. " They sing,
lhey dance, lhey make speeches. About
the only thing lhey don't do is kill themselves. Why do it up !here when all you
have to do is change your Euthanasta day:
It 's cheaper. anyway. Just that white robe •
ht.Jh7 No, you're not the enter1ainer type;
you're out to make some sort of point.
right?"
"I guess so." Floyd said distractedly. He
had an erection, his first in months, and the
gtrl was staring at it.
" Wow. are you huge! " she smiled,
obviously impressed. " Aoyd, you belong in
the Olympics with that thing ·•
" Oh. come on," he blushed. " You're just
saying thai. " He put on the white robe and
11ed the sash lighlly around his waist
" No. I'm not," she said, reaching b~
tween the folds and hefting it. " I bet you
Page 9
could make quite a livmg off this thing, if
vou show it to the right people."
" You mean people might pay me to have
sex w•th them?" Aoyd sa1d.
" Sure," 1he girl said, letting him go. "It
beats pushtng buttons all day."
A oyd looked at his f~ngers, the pads were
broad and fla t from pushing buttons all his
hie " It 's real little when it's not up. Is that
okay?"
The girl sm•led warmly, " Everything's
okay, Floyd. Hey, enough of this; it's lime
for your moment!" She pushed him gently
through a red velvet curtain. Go get them,
Floyd!"
He was m a plexiglass elevator zooming
in a plexiglass tower; the summit
was far above the city, higher than
anylhing else. Once a day, one person was
chosen from the thousands who'd paid for
a chance, and Floyd had won. Although
he'd starved half his life to pay for his
chance and would starve for the other half
to pay for winning, it was worth it. The
moment was worth it. Already there were
crowds of people on the streets and the
roof lops, faces turned upwards, looking
like hundreds, thousands, millions of little
blank buttons. Sickly sweet strains of
Mantovani swirled around him; throbbing
in tune with his full· sized erection; he sang
softly, off key;
"Once in a lifetime, a man has a moment,
That wonderful moment when fate takes
his hand..."
uPWArd~
.. Millions of people watching. listening,
commanded to gaze up at the ftgure at the
top of the plexlglass tower, or watch his
image simultaneously broadcast on the
nearesl view screen. For one moment. ebcty
seconds, Aoyd would have their complete
attention. For Of)e moment, million• of
people - the entire city - would see him
and know his name. Some would
remember him; they had to, no one ever did
what he was about to dol And maybe some
or someone would find him and help him
escape from his office with the three
buttons. and his habitation module where
all he ever did was sit in front of hla
viewscreen watching somebody else have
sex while his hands unconsciously clutched
the dry, dead meat between his legs,
dre3ming, always dreaming of being
somelhing different ...
A great clarion call. a bell from
somewhere; his moment had begun. Aoyd
smiled down at the millions of tiny bunons
and loosened the sash of his white robe.
What she'd said about his erection...
" And lhls is my moment," he sang
loudly, triumphantly. " My once in a
lifetime..."
He flung off his robe, spread his arms.
"lookl" he cried. Too late; his erection was
gone. Forty·five seconds left. His hands
made vague, fruitless motions at his groin
while something with cold tentacles
crawled up his spine. The tiny buttons
below didn'l blink, being buttons that only
responded when pushed. One button
couldn't push another.
Aoyd would have cried if he knew how,
wishing he could push a bunon to r•tore
h1s erection. " It doesn' t workl" he said,
plucking at himself, working hopelessly
against lhe moment when the elevator
would jerk downwards, out of the sight and
into the masses of the dull, blank bunons.
Especially down where buttons were on.
off. and dev1at1ons that would only glow fOf'
a moment, or never glow at all.
As usual. Floyd stared at the screen. left
forefinger poised by the 'deviation' button.
nght hand stroking in vain between his
legs Andre Kos1elan1z s1mmered through
the audio amb1ence, and Floyd sang off•
key·
" Once in a lifetime. a man has a
moment. .."
At noon. Floyd pressed the 'off' button.
The red line had changed direct1on once.
He'd pr85Sed 'deviatton', but the button
hadn't glowed. That bolhered htm as he
made his way through tho elevators and the
Jube·transporls and the masses of buttons
and people. At eight m~nules past twelve
he stepped out tnto a hallway on the ninety·
ninth floor of a building 10 the center of 1he
city. No people. No audio ambience unit
sent sublimtnal slrains of sound and rhvthm
..
--
Page 10
NEWSPEAK
Tuesday, September 13,
~
Help for writing problems Hospitality offered
In Term A, WPI wUI offer a new servtce
to students w1th questions about how to
write project reports, prOJeCt propouls, lab
repons. and term papers. The Writing
Resource Center will be open on the
second floor of the Project Center every
afternoon from 1:00 p.m to 5:00 p.m.•
during which hours WPI students are invited to use the library of books, learning
modules, and handouts, which are available
there. Trained writing Consultants will be at
the Center 1n Term A, every Tuesday and
Thursday afternoon, to review with
students drafts of any material written in
connection with a WPI project or course.
If you want help with any writing
problem, the procedure to follow is to tell
the student-receptionist at the Center what
your problem is. The receptionist w ill note
your specific questions, and send them
along with the draft of your paper, to one of
the W riting Consultants w ith whom you
can make an appointment to discuss the
paper. During the meeting, the Consultant
will go over your paper with you and make
suggestions for helping you with any
problems you have.
If you don't think vour writinQ problem Is
difficult enough to take to a Writing
Consultant, you will still find the new
Center worth gettmg to know. The Center
has cop1es ava1lable of several different
handoUis wh1ch provide clear instructions
for project proposals and report writing.
These handouts spell out '" detail the
format WPI faculty advisors expect
students to follow in writing project
proposals end project reports. Pefore you
start an MOP or lOP, you should read these
handouts carefully. The Center also has a
collection of handouts briefly treating
matters such as footnoting, common errors
"' writing, and sentence structure. (New
videotapes 1n the library AV room are also
available for these problems.)
The Project Office considers the W riting
Resource Center an important addition to
lhe services it offers students working on
proJects. The tim e the Writing Consultants
are present to help w ill be increase eactterm - if WPI students make use of the
new facility So, if you have any questions
at all abou t writing problems later this year,
remember to check ou t the W riting '
Resource Center on the second floor of the
Project Center.
Women Unite
WHAT IS TH E SOCIETY OF WOMEN
EN GINEERS?
The Society of Women · Engineers is the
professional organizatton of graduate
women engineers and women with
equivalent engineering experience. It is a
nonprofit, educational, serVIce organization
dedicated to making known the need for
women engineers and encouraging young
women to consader an engineering
education .
The Society of Women Engineers
conducts surveys among women
engineering students and graduate
engineers; publishes and distributes the
results of these and other surveys;
produces publications relat1ng to career
oppor1unities for w omen In engineering;
and publishes an informative newsletter.
WHAT DOES SHE 007
1. Informs young women, their parents,
counselors, and the general public of the
qualifications and achievements of women
engtneers and the opportunities open to
them.
2. Serves as a center of information on
women in engineering
3. Encourages women engineers to
a11ain high levels of educational and
professional achievement.
If you'd like to find out more, come to
our first open meeting. Old and new
members welcome! WHERE: Higgins Lab
209. WHEN Thurs. Sept. 15th at 4:00 p.r1l
Refreshments will be setvedl Hope to see
you thenl
Junior Prom Chairman, Co-chairmen
Nomination papers are due on Monday, Sept. 19, 1977 by 4:00
p.m . Petitions must be subm iHed to one of the class officers or
Student AHa in and read as follows:
We the undersigned hereby nomiute
for the office of Chairman-Co-chairmen, of the Junior Prom Committee,
Class of 1979. Elections will be held Wed., Sept. 21, 1977 in Daniels
Hall, 10 a .m . to 4:00 p.m.
Home hospitality is being offered for the
Jewish H1gh Holidays and every Sabbath
by the Sisterhood of Temple Emanuel, May
and Chandler Streets. Students are most
cordially invited to join a local family for
dmner and services Just call one of the
numbers listed below and arrangements
w1ll be made for you to be welcomed into
our homes. Rosh Hashanah begins at
sundown. Monday, Sept . 12. Yom Kippur
hegins at sundown, Wednesday, Sept. 21 .
Shabbat is every Friday n1ghtl
Temple Emanuel Is affiliated with the
-
I!
Unaon of American Hebrew Congregauor,.
and can put you m contact W1th thlir
College Education Department . We ott111
vanety of programs InCluding 1
bibliographic service and reference help for
studenls working on independent stUdy
projects in Judaica, year·long ltlldy
programs in Israel offering up to 39
credits, summer programs in Israel, and 1
series of weekend semmars.
Please call us for Information lnd
hospitality arrangements: 752-5723, '1532121 , or 753-0562.
Men and women are needed to work with mentally 11~
physically handicapped children in an existing Boy Scout Troo,.
If interested, contact Frank at 798-8234 or Box 2065.
INTERNSHIP IN POLICY RELATED SCIENCE
The MARGRET MEAD INTERNSHIP in Polley Related Scie~
awarded by the Scientists' Institute for Public Information ( S. I.P.I.), is
designed to develop undergraduate science students, through pradiCII
experience In the world of scientific work, as creative contributors to tilt ·
community at large. Students work as interns for at least ten weeks at a
time, either in S.I.P.I .'s New York office or with one of the local co"'.
miHees, and may receive modest cost-Of-living and academic credit for
their work. All undergraduate science students are eligible. For further
information and application forms write to :
INTERNSHIP DIRECTOR
SIP I
49 E. S3rd Street
New York, New York 10022
WANTED: Adven-
turous Companion
with interest in
engineering.
You're ca.reer oriented You're 1ntereBt.6d tn
" Have you ever been mad at Ma Bell? Want to do
something about it7 Come to Mass PIRG ' s in_troductory
meeting Thursday, September 15th, at 3 p .m . in the DIA
conference room . third floor Washburn. We'll be discussing
the creation of TELCAG , an agency to advocate the consumer' s interest against the phone company; other fall
projects; how to earn lOP c redit with PIRG ; and other
issues- Join us - free coffee and donuts will be served."
engi.Deering.
You're a.n 1i'ld1vidllll
seeking expei"lenne 1n prot>
lema.naJys1s, requ1r1ng de01sion -maldng results. YOu
want management t.ra.1.n1ng
a.ndleedersbip axper.len08.
Experience that will be a.n
asset :In a.n engineering c&
reer-or any careeryouimtY
choose.
NOTICE
To: All Students
Re : Check Cashing
Thi s not ice Is being distributed In order to assist y ou '" pl1nnlng your check cashang
activitie s here at WPI during this com1119 academ1c year . It is hoped th1t you wtll take
advantage of this conven ience and service.
The followi ng checks may be cashed at the Accounting Office In StraHon Hall durtng
the hours 9: 00 a .m .-12 noon and 1: 00-4: 00 p.m ., Monday through Friday:
( 11 F ir st party personal c hecks not exceeding $25.00, I.e., ONLY YOUR OWN PER·
SONAL CHECK, MAOE PAYABLE TO CASH OR YOURSELF. An exception will be
made 1n cases of checks from parents issued to students.
•
( 21 Busintss checks not exceedi ng ns.oo and made payable to th e student cashing the
check.
(3) WPI chKks not exceeding $100.00, m 1de payable to the student cashing t he check .
It is expected that all checks cashed will be honor ed lor paym ent by t he issuing
bank. However in cases w her e checks are r eturned unpatd by a bank there will be •
s1o.oo c har ge and loss of c heckcashlng privileges, according to th e fo llowing schedule:
( 1l FIRST BOUNCED CH ECK - ON E MONT H from d.Jte of honortng check and
pay ment of fee.
(2) SECOND BOUNCED CHECK - SI X MONTHS from date of honortng check and
payment of fee.
(3) TH IRD BOUN CED CH ECK - ON E YEAR f rom date of honortng check ilnd
payment of tee
Ifyou are tb1s in·
dividua.l, you ca.n get all of
th1s experienoe t.brough tbl
adventure ofArmy RO:ro.
@)Army ROTC.
Learn what
it takes to lead
,:
''CALL: 752-7209
Room 28A
Harrington Auditorium''
I•
-----.....
NEWSPEAK
There will be a meeting of the Junior Class (1979) on
Sept. 16. 19n in Kinnicutt Hall, Room 116. Important activities (Junior Prom. Mixer. Parties. etc.) will be discussed
end your ideas are needed. Be there! Refreshments will be
served after the meeting.
Newly elected officers:
Pres. -
v.
Robert Hert, TKE 752-9946
Pres. -
Scott Booth. Elsworth 3
Secretary -
Jim Mancheeter, TKE 752-9946
Treaeurer -
larry Marino. FIJI 752-1838
Page 11
ATTENTION: SENIORS
The appilcations for GRE's, GMAT's, LSAT's and MCAT's
are now available in the Office of Graduate ancl Career Plans
<Washburn 3rd Floor). The deadline for fall registration and tnting dates are as follows :
GRE's - October 15, 19n (Closing dlrltt for retistration Sept. 19)
GMAT's- November 5, U77 (Closing date for registration Oct.
14)
MCAT's- October 1, 1977 (Closing date for registration Sept. 2)
April 30, 1911 (Closing date for registration April4)
LSAT's - October 1, 1977 (Closing date for registration Sept. 8)
December 3, 1977 (Closing date for registration Nov. 7)
Check OGCP for following testing dates.
Office of Graduate & Career Plans
Washburn - 3rd floor
Business. Science. Engineering.
This semester is the right time to get a TI
calculator tailored to the work you're doing.
Professional decision making system.
Loaded with statistics functions.
TheM~
Business calculator
A business major's dream machine.
....._ Accounting. Marketing . Education.
Social Sciences. Life Sciences. Health.
Statistics plays a major role in dozens
of career fields. Here's a calculator with
the advanced cap~ility you need to
handle your projects. Comes with
Calculating Better Decisions, a $4.95 book value.
Helps you get the most out of the SR-51-11. Stepby-step illustrations show how to use its powerful
preprogrammed functions. Learn how to gather
data. Weigh alternatives. Arrive at rapid, accurate
decisions.
If you're building a career in business, the MBA
can be ideal. It provides instant answers to complex business problems at the touch of a key. It is
preprogrammed for a wide variety of functions
and formulas business professionals face every
day. Take internal rate of return , for example, a
valuable calculation for accurate capital budgeting. It's complicated, often difficult, and takes time.
The MBA handles it in seconds, for 12 ~
different cash flows! It also offers programmability - up to 32 keystrokes for
solving repetitive problems easily.
SR-51-11
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
@1877 Tau fnslrumtn11IIICOfPOIIIId
INCORPORATED
Page 12
Entertainm t
100% Cotton
James Couon
James Montgomery
Alden Hall
September 6, 19n
rev•ewed b y Maureen Higgins
James Colton is a blues master, cspable
of electrifying an audience Wtsh the same
could be said tor James Montgomery. The
second show opened with two strong
mstrumentals, including " Burner, " and
soon, Cotton was on stage using his voice
and m outh harp to the fullest. Hts "Creeper
Creeps Again" was particularly exciting.
Other numbers Included " Red Rooster,"
" Roc ket 88," " How Long Can A Fool Go
Wrong?" " Caledonia," and " Fever." The
show lived up to the " 100 per cent Cotton"
image evinced by the t -shirts worn by most
of the crew.
The band consisted of Ken Johnson on
drums. Mtke Zaitchik on the keyboard,
Charles Calmese on bass, incomparable
lead guit&rlst Mat Murohv. verv talented
sax man David W ood ford, and James
Calion, nat urally. The hand ptcked band
meshes perfec11y wi th Cotton's style. No
one could have done so much w ith such an
unP-nthusiastic audtence as Cotton.
J ames M ontgomery and his band left
much to be desired. Not only were they late
in arriving, but by the time they did they
were not in very good playing condition.
Montgomery did nothing but go through
the mo tions of pulling on a show. He and
the band played a few numbers and called
i t qu11s. " Schoolin' Them Dice" and
" MoJo" were fair. Unfortunate!•(, the
songs seemed to be part of a routine which
was oppressively boring to the band
members
nothing impressive.
Jhe blues are not that strong on this
campus, and it is unfortunate that many
who attended these shows were not the
least bit i nterested in the music. A better
audience would have precipitated a better
show .
to
M
IP
fr
•
•
I ll
,.
wi
be
tin
co
f it
photo by Ann-Marie Robinson
James Cotton Band
Carsman - superb!
Larry Carsman Jazz Quartet
The Wedge
September 9, 19n
reviewed by Maureen •Higgins
The Larry Carsman Jazz Quartet posters
were misleading. as the band was a trio for
the show This trio consisted of Larry
Carsman, vocals and classical guitar, Scott
Lee, bass fiddle, and Bob Jackson, percussion. Missing was Bill Novich, a master
of the flute, clarinet, alto and soprano sax.
The band was extremely versatile with
blues, jazz, and soft rock numbers. The
solos were well·timed, and Carsman played
with such clarity that at times he produced
music similar to that of a reed instrument.
The relaxed coffee house atmosphere of
the Wedge, and an intent audience were
beneficial to the show.
photo by Ann-Marie Robinson
James Montgomery
Mime magic
by Russell ThomtJs
Trent Arterberry returned to WPI
Monday night and presented another
memorabfe show. Trent has performed
here each of the past two years and has
won lhe respect and admiration of
everyone who has seen him. For those of
you who have not wltnHsed his performance, Trent is a mime artist who's
show brin~s to mind one word: magic.
From the ftrst moments to the final bows,
Trent and his magic filled the consciousness of every member of the
dUdience. I dare say that an hour wtth Trent
Arterberry tS an hour of the finest entertainment you'll ever experience. If you
ever get a chance to see him, don't miss it.
The closing act of the Monday night
show was Travis Shook and the Club Wow
a musical, comedy duo They faced half th~
crowd that greeted Trent Arterberry. The
people who left apparently thought the
f"'ext act couldn't 1op the opener. They
wPrP rioh1 T.,Air music was neo-obscure
IFC mixer
If you like Disco music. dancing, and
dnnking beer. you liked the mixer the IFC
had last Friday night . Hawkeye, a band out
of Boston. played an excellent blend Discofunk. There were approximately 500
people, includtng the four bus loads from
Bavpath Junior Colle~e. at the mucer. Lots
Some of the songs were originals by
Carsman, such as "Valentine's Day Song"
and "Depression Song." "Brazilie," a
medlev of three Brazilian aonge arranged by
Carsman, was excellent, with its strong
Latin beat Other outstanding numblrt
include " Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My
Baby," " Walk On By," "EverytimeWeSey
Good-bye," "One of These Days," a Mlel
Davis tune, and another number by DuQ
81ington .
Carsman carried the melody with strang
backing by Lee, but, as a drummer,
Jackson was not in the same league alhl
others. This incompatibility was partialllty
obvious in "Stomping At the Savoy."
The trio has only been together flu
' months and the question is: where to tw111l
With Lee leaving for a higher calling In New
York, and Novick on his own tangent. the
future of Carsman is uncertain. He Ia a
superb guitarist, without much finlnclll
backing, and so might never make it "blg.H
It's a shame such talent is being Wlltld.f*»
mal1er what is aaid about the intelliglnclof
the record buying public, "people Ill*
good stupid mulic to bed stupid mu*.llut
theY ttll lUte atuoid mullc."
and next to impossible to relate to and their
humor was off-the--wall and carried the
show. The highlight was a series of take-offs on hard rock songs like "My
Generalion" (which became "My G-g-g·gg ...friends"l. The return of this group is not
an event I will look forward to.
Those of you who enjoyed the blues of
James Couon can look forward to September 22nd, when the group " Rory
Block" and the soloist John Hammond will
be presented in a nightclub concert. " Rorv
Block" plays uptempo Chicago blues like
Cotton where as Hammond specializes in
1he Delta style blues. Dancing music will be
provided in the break and full cash bar with
waitress service will be provided.
Also coming up is a jazz concert
featuring Ronnie Laws and Seawind on the
30th of September. More on these two
shows next week.
Please offer your react ton to this column;
we'd be glad to hear it.
.-'
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1011
filn'
on
Fan
Sat
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......
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lt97
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incl~
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~hie:
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COiot
Larry Carsman
photo by Tom Danlfis
Bridges as art?
of people were dancing. and even more
were drinking beer Twenty kegs of beer
and 15 cases of wine were sold, bringing in
a profit of over $500. John Goodwin, the
IFC social chairman, did a fine job of
organiztng the mixer, which brought the
IFC ou t of debt .
BRASS
CHOIR
1st rehearsal
Wednesday at 6:30 p.m.
Opening Sep1ember 9 through October
8, 19n at. the Gorden Library of Worcester
Polytechnic Institute is the exhibition
BRIDGES: THE SPANS OF NORTH
AMERICA, developed and circualted by the
Smi l hson ia n
Institution
Traveling
Exhtbi tion Service and based on the Viking
PrE>ss book by Dav•d Plowden.
The exhibition explores through
Plowd en's black and white photographs
i11'ld
archival d ocumentation from the
Smtlhsoman lnstilution the five major
bridge lypes found in this country: stone,
wood, iro n, steel and concrete. David
Plowcien's phot ographs, which f orm the
nucleus of lhe exhibition, are as majestic,
111onumr.ntal and yet entirely pleasing
·•es•hellcallv as the actual bridges they
reJ>r e5enl. A seleclion o f bridge
mt?m orab•lm f•om the collections of the
Smi1hsomlln's Dtvtsion of Mechanical and
C1vtl (nytllc•:llll~ tS also presen ted w tlh
,.~nlanalory text tn order 10 gtve the 'llewer
lti!StC 111slruc11ve S!atisucs and historical
tuyhhghts m 1he development of parttcular
loo utrflfli'J moll Pro 1to;
David Plowden was born in 1932 end
became senously Interested in phot~
in 1959 He studied with Minor White
Nathan Lyons and was awarded 1
Guggenheim Fellowship in 1988. His~
tnclude Farewell to Steam, Uncoln and nd
Amenca 18()9 1968, Floor of the Slcy, 1
The Hand of Man on Ameocs. Mr. J'loWd8ll
undertook the mammoth task of traveinll
10
over 20,000 mtles during six y~rt
assemble this impressive conecuon rJ
p hotographs.
Many of the bridges represented in tht
oxhtbition are primary examples of thli
type and are instantly recogntzable. !he
Golden Gate. Brooklyn , and OelaWI"
Ml'mooal bridges. others are ~
surpnses: The Wire Bridge •n New
In
land. Maine. the Tunkhannock Vlltduct
Prmnsylvanta, and the Burlington Northefll
Ra1lw.Jy Brtdge tn Hanover, MontcJf\8 C.
DPnnis M Zembala of Washmgton. 0 he
1
provtded addtional research tor
mchtbiuon whtch tS tra veling for thre:.:.=
under l he ausptces of the Smtl
tnstlluflon Traveling Exhtbitton Se(Viea.
7
A
NEWSPEAK
Museum offerings
MAJORS DON'T MATTER ANYONECANENJOYSTUDENT
MEMBERSHIP IN
THE ART.MUSEUM
YCAJ don' t have to be an art history major
10 .,;oy membership in the Worcester Art
llut*Um .
Indeed,
whether
your
~ation is organic chemistry or
~literature, the Museum has a great
dill to offer you in terms of films, concerts,
IIC'urel, and travel. And all it costs you Is
•
As a member of the Art Museum, you
w1 enjoy the following benefits for a full
,.., from the month your membership
blginl: free entrance to the Museum at all
Jjmel: free admission to the Sunday
_.., series and two film series; compublications such as the events
c;lllndlf, invitations to exhibition previews;
1 Muteum shop discount; the choice of a
llide selection of adult art classes, for credit
• pure enJoyment; and a chance to par·
licipete 1n trips to art centers at home and
,._..,ary
~broad.
Free Film Pass
Your student membership card is
11181\tiallv a tress pass to two excellent film
..- - gtving you a second chance to see
tome of the great films you missed. Seven
1ms from around the globe will be shown
on Tueldlys at 2:30, 6, and 8:30 p.m. as
,en of the International Film Fare; and a
of eight films comprising the
FM.IIY Film Festival will be screened
SllurdeYs at 2 p m.
The international series will open Oc·
•
18 with Akira Kurosawa's DOO.s' J<..
.,119101. a poignant look at the wretched
llllillenct of Tokyo slum dwellers who are
-.!ned and uplifted by their dreems and
lullons. In November, Edwrd Munch
ltllSI. by Peter Watkins, will offer a
IICMftg protrait of the great Norwegian
IIIII! one of the most influential painters in
IM1oundlng of European Expressionism.
Throughout the winter and spring
111011tha, the international program wi11
lncluduhowing of Francois Truffaut'a Two
fWh Girls 119721. on January 10; Louis
llllllt's Lacombe, Ludtm 119141, on
ftbrur1 7; Satyajit Ray'a ThtJ Adviury
••ion
119111, on March 7; Luchino Visconti's
Death in Vtmice (19111, on Apnl 4; and
Jeanne Moreau's Lumtlre .)1976), on May
2.
Legends and Fsnttlsies
Although designed with
young
audiences tn mind, the Saturday family film
sef!es is not exclusively for children.
Anyone who loves legends and fantasies
will delight '" the season's offerings. The
film classic The Wizard of Oz (19391, which
, will be shown February 18, Is ageless, as is
The Nutcr•cker, which will highlight the
Christmas season. Other films in the family
series include The Uttl• Pnnce (1914),
based on the novella by Antoine de Saint·
Exupery, and My Uncle Antoln• 119111,
winner of several Canadian film awards.
Sundsy Concerts
If you need a Sunday afternoon study
break. your membership card will provide
free entrance to the Museum's eight-month
concert series. Organists, pianists,
vtolinists, and string quartets will perform a
series of seveh public concerts and five
organ recitals in the Museum' s
Rena1ssance Court Sunday afternoons at 3
p.m.
World-Famous Collection
Most Importantly, membership means
unlimited access to the Museums's world·
famous collection . 42 galleries of
chronologically arranged art from the tomb
sculpture of ancient Egypt to the canvases
of the AbS1ract Expressionists. You may
browse through the collection at your own
pace, or receive a gallery tour provided
without charge by trained docents.
Students are reminded that the
Museum's Art Reference library ts
available without charge for their research
needs. Beginning in October, the Ubrary
will extend its hours to include Sundays,
from 2 to 5 p.m., as a special convenience
for college etudents.
Membership is open at all times and
continues for a full year from the month it
begins. If you are interested in joining, write
or call the Membership Office, (617) 7994406, or visit the Museum at 56 Salisbury
Street and sign up in person. It may be the
wises1 $8 investment you make all year.
Print Display
Tho CRAFT CENTER, 25 Sagamore
Roed, Worcester is pleased to announce a
special exhibit of large scale dye printa by
Slndra Kocher which wiH be on display
tlrough the month of September. The
IMNe highly colorful prints range from 20
•40tnehes to 40 x 60 inchea in size and are
tar llle. The exhibit is open to the public
.,_of charge Monday through Saturday 9
l.ln IO
5 p.m.
"Mood pictures as one viewer has called
"-n, these color designs may bring to
mind • host of felt emotions and images -
Eaaltm mandalas, solar radiations, the
Rorschach fascination of associative
lhlpes Their centers dominate, generating
the explosive and Implosive forces of the
IUrrOunding colors. For most of all, I hope
1' - designs invite involvement in a
tlrong, transcendent experience of pure
COb.'' SK
Sandra Kocher received her B.A . from
Oberlin College and master's degree in art
from Stanford University. The former
Director of Watson Gallery, Wheaton
College (Norton, Maes.l, she Is now
Assistant Professor of Art at Worcester
State College.
Sandra Kocher's drawings and paintings
have been exhibited in the Virginia Museum
of Fine Arts (Virginia Artists Biennial
exhibitidns 'trom which work was also
selected for several 2-year traveling
exhibitions) and in the Wadsworth
Atheneum. Hartford. In 1968 she par·
tictpated in the joint exhibtion "Kocher,
Cossill and Abbot" at the 20th Century
Gallery, Williamsburg, Virginia. More
recently her work has been seen in faculty
exhibitions at Worcester State College.
It's1a better movie than 'Blazing Saddles'
or Young Frankenstein'.- Rolllna Stone
SUNDAY
SEPT. 18
7 and 9 p.m.
ALDEN HALL
rfi()M CINEMA &
Page 13
77-78 concert series
Some of the most important works of art
presented at the Worcester Art Museum
this fall wtll not be hanging on the walls.
They will fill the Main Court Sunday afternoons at 3 p.m .• and will represent the
creative efforts not of Rttmbrandt and
Whlstlef, but of Mozart and Copland. The
" works" will be the musical selections
comprising the Museums's 59th annual
concert series of seven free public concerts
and five organ recitals - some of which are
made possible by generous gifts from area
businesses and individuals.
Opening the 1977-78 concert season will
be an October 2 piano recital by Cameron
Grant and James Winn, who will perform a
one piano: four hand repertoire of chamber
music. Originally from Denver, where they
met and formed their remarkable team,
Grant and Winn attained early recognition
followtng an appearance with the Denver
Symphony Orchestra. Their concert at the
Museum Is generously supported by a gift
from Charles B. Cohn in memory of Bamey
Cohn
The internationally renowned Chilingirian
String Quartet will perform the seventh
annual William S Sargent Memorial
Concert on October 16. In the few years
since their formation in 1971 , the Quartet
has played throughout Europe, Canada,
and the United States, and has won the
1976 Young Concert Artists International
Auditions. The Quartet is composed of
violinists Lavon Chillnglrian and Mark
Buller, violist Simon Rowland-Jones. and
cellist Philip de Groote. The concerts are
made possible by the generous bequest of
Marlon P. Sargent.
Another winner of the Young Concert
Artists International Auditions, Stephanie
Brown, will present a piano concert
November 13. A graduate of the Juilllatd
School of Music, Mia Brown made
concert appearances at the Metropolitan
Museum and Boston's Symphony Hall, and
has completed three nationaJ tours with
"Music from Marlboro." Her concert is
made possible by the gift of Stuart P.
Anderson.
To toast the holidays, the Museum has
scheduled The Salisbury Singers to pet·
form tt'te annual holiday concert, which
they previously gave in 1975. Formed In
1973, the choral group is composed of
approximately 40 area musicians directed
by Malama Robbins, Professor of Music at
Anna Maria College.
On January 29, The Emerson String
Quartet will present the 25th annual
Thomas Hovey Gage Memonal Concert.
The Quartet's members violinists ·
Eugene Drucker and Philip Setzer, violist
Guillermo F1gueroa, and cellist Eric Wilson
are all graduates of Juilliard, where they
formed their group in 1972. Messrs Setzer
and Drucker were the only Ameri~n
prizewtnners in the 1976 Queen Bizabeth
Violin Competition of Belgium, an honor
not bestowed on an Amertcan violinist
since 1963.
Thomas Hovey Gage, one of the original
incorporators and trustees of the WOf·
cester Art Museum in 1896, served as the
Museum's president from 1934 until his
death in 1938. In all, he wes actively
associated with the Museum for 42 years,
during which lime he continuously looked
for new ways to encourage the use of the
tnstitution by the people of Worcester. He
was the prime originator of the Museum's
Sunday concerts, which are attended by
thousands each year. The annual concerts
in his honor are made possible by a gift
from his daughter Mrs. Albert W. Rice.
The Peoples Savings Bank has
generously sponsored the final Jwo con·
certs in the series: a ptano recital by
Bennett Lerner on February 26, and a violin
concert by Ani Kavafian on April 2.
Mr. Lerner, a member of the faculty at
the Manhauan School of Music, has
performed with the Boston "Pops" and thtf
Manahattan Contemporary Ensemble. His
concert will tnclude pieces by Aaron
Copland and John Cage, who have both
commended hts perfomance of their workel
Miss Kavafian, also a winner of the
Young Concert Artists International
Audtions, was the recipient of the 1976
Avery Fisher Award. A non·competitive
prize awarded on the basis of recom·
mendatlons made by a panel of the
country's distinguished musicians, the
Fisher prize brought Miss Kavafian a debut
with the New York Philharmonic end
engagements with six other American
orchestras..
Sunday afternoons at the Worcester Art
Museum will also be brightened by a aeries
of organ recitals on the Morgan Memorial
Organ. The five concerts, offered at 3 p.m ••
include presentations by: Phillip Stelnhaue,
organist-choirmaster for the Church of the
Advent in Boston, on October 30; Alan D.
Wingard of New Braintree, on November
Xl; Wojciech Wojtasiewicz of the Juilliard
School, on January 15; William Setf,
organist-choirmaster for All Saint's Church
in Worcester, on March 12; and Robert F.
Littlefield, organist-choirmaster for the First
Baptist Church in Beverly. on April 23.
All concerts ant free and open to the
public. Non-members of the Museum are
required to pay general admission.
John Klemmer
by He/sine Lssky
(CPS) - Hush. John Klemmer IS playmg.
It's a sold out performance at a small but
important club called Ebbets Field In
Denver. And the jazz sexaphone cuts
through the air like the Queen Elizabeth
heading out tnto the waters of the Atlantic.
John Klemmer's sax ts clear and he is a
joy to watch. What's more, so is his
audience. One man in the front row seemed
tgnited by the rhythm and some JUSt smiled
in the music's direction with the expression
of those who have made a good decision.
Klemmer is all 1here and when he works,
he literally climbs the scales and up off his
stool only to return to where he began. In
"Turtle Island" he moves up and down the
sexaphone and then stands aside to let his
band do thetr own strut. Not for one
moment though, does Klemmer disappear
excep1 for an unusually talented solo by the
bongo player Ovation, and back to the
melody.
During a sound check earlier tn the
evening before the crowd arrives, Klemmer
directs rehearsal like a traffic cop. The
drummer gets his cue on what to em·
phaslze from a swift bump and grind from
Klemmer. The sound man reworks It after
Klemmer says he hears a " CB notse" from
1he bongos. And Ted Saunders. the agile
man at the keyboard, ts told, "no
Liberac:e
"Still it is Saunder's duel with
Klemmer later that forms one of the most
welcomed parts of the show. a piece called
" Prelude to Waterfalls."
Klemmer's sax has the sound of a
musician who often geis up in the middle of
the mght to work out a melody alone. And
he does Ebbets Field ts the kind of club
that makes that Image possible and it
worked in concert.
While Klemmer refrains from calling
I hem heroes, his record collection contains
nearly every disc recorded by Milas Davis
and John Coltrane. Some of his music is
tmprovtsational and he was in Denver
following a stint with poets Michael Mc·
Clure, William Burroughs, and Charles
Bukowski, among others. at the recent
Santa Cruz Poetry Festival. "That," he said
1a1er between shows, " was exciting with a
capttal E." Klemmer was asked to play at
Santa Cruz following the success of his
l atest album , " Barefoot Ballet ", an
especially mellow album which obviously
brought many to Ebbets Field for more,
judgtng from the heightened applause for
the encore, a cut from the record
Klemmer's versatility extends to film
scores and he recently accompanted a
movie simply called " Mustache" by a
female ftlmmaker tn Cahfornta .
Bot h shows at this club were sold out, a
homNun lor any performer. To that, en·
core
The WPI Stage Band will hold its first rehearsals
at 4:00 p.m. Tuesday, September 13, in the main
auditorium of Alden Hall, with Mr. Louis Vella
conducting. Plans for an A term concert and future
rehearsals wiil be released in the near future.
NEWSPEAK
Beware the profit
l,y ..... '71 D11niels
• ·mrner, . 1.1r beloved ;:ampus
.~ndltf'Wef.. a whole series of subtle
changes Of coursf!, with the exception of
t ho.~ o
Ml who Ci • still driving around in
! aarch 01 l • larking :;pace, you've all seen
the "•.nw " Sanford Riley Hall, bedecked in
an < .tment of bedazzling hues, ranging
from Leh·Over Brown to Sale-Priced
Purple. Thousands of parents were heard
to r:we owr the exhibit. "20th Century
Con• .·J~tion Stillifes". and the ac·
r.l')mpan) .g display, "Plaster and You",
., 'tich adorned the firs1·floor and basem8rlt
c rridors during Orientation Week. Max P.
Profit, (you all remember Ma"; he was
WPI's resident Efficiency Expert until he
accidentally cut his own job to save
money!) newly appointed to the post of
Chief of Campus Miscellany, told this
reporter that the Riley show was just one
example of a new, school wide project to
brighten the environment on the hHI.
"Give me a month, and you won't
recognize the old place," said Proftt, fresh
back from taking claues in Outdoor Paint·
ing and Cabinet Making at the Craft Center.
"Those concrete flowerboxes in front of
the Project Center were just the tip of the
iceberg! Yes sir, I'm gonna put the FUN
back tnto Whoopiel "
"I'm afraid to ask, Max. but I suppoM
that you've got something atreedy In the
works tor that h~ they left in the middle of
Freeman Ptaza."
"Oamm right I have! You remember tha1
st11ue we put i~ front of the Library a.t
This
ve-1"
"You meen," I asked, almost fearing the
answer, "hat thing that looks like an air·
ptane propellor?"
Right ."
"Don't tett me," I said, "that you've
ftnaly got enough money to buy the rest of
the plane?"
"All right, wise guy, who let you in on the
seaet717"
"No, no. just a lucky gu..... I bluned,
trying to hold back the laughter. Spot1ing a
funny looking typewriter on his dealt, I atk,
"And what's this, another one of your
crazy ideas?"
"Right! Our new, computerized heating
!;ysternl Here. take a crack at it." Sliding
tnt o the seal offered me by the erratic skin
fhnt, I switched on the keyboard, and was
greeted by a message on the adjoining TV
screen: WELCOME TO THE WORLD OF
HEAn YOU ARE IN A SMALL. SPAR·
SELY FURNISHEO DORM ROOM. IT IS
COLD HERE. A COMPUTERIZED
THERMOSTAT ADORNS THE WALL.
"Don't tell me." I asked, "that you have
10 play games to turn on the heat?"
"Look kid. I thought I told you, what
we're talking about here is FUN. Just
imagine: you're sitting in an empty dorm
room some dark wmtet: night, with nothing
to do. Suddenly, you rern.ember your
friendly Heat Terminal down the hall I 'Think
of how much fun it will be trying to crutwitt
the machine and actually get the heat to
come on? Hundreds of kids will gather
around the terminals every night, trying to
find their way through the Administrative
Maze, the B & G pit, and the endless RA
tunnels!"
Sending the hopelessness of the
situation, I typed into the console, "RAISE
TEMPERATURE," to be quashed with the
reply, "SORRY, I DON'T KNOW THAT
WORD!"
"BYPASS COMPUTER" brought the
response, "WATCH tn A ftel'ce, EX-ARMY
COLONEL BARS THE WAY! THERE ARE
SOME FORMS TO BE FILLED OUT IN
TRIPLICATE HERE."
"Fill FORMS."
"YOUR FORMS HAVE BEEN LOST
UNDER
A
STACK
OF
OLD
NEWSPEAKES. THERE IS A TELEPHONE
IN THE ROOMI" "Go aheed and dial the
Ptant Serviea officel" exclaimed Profit..
''The machine will automatically twitch to
my favorite garnet" "DIAL PHONE," I
typed, aod aure enough. the screen came
alive with, "CONGRATULATIONS! YOU
HAVE SUCCESSFULLY ENTERED THE
LOST WORLD OF DIMENSION! DO YOU
WISH INSTRUCTION?"
"YES."
"DIMENSION IS THE NEW COM·
PUTERIZED TELEPHONE SYSTEM AT
WPI. IT RUNS ON A SYSTEM OF TONES.
TO COMPLETE A CAll, YOU MUST
ENTER THE CORRECT TONE SEQUENCE.
GOOD LUCK!"
" Tone sequence? You mean .•• "
" Right again, Bozo! " cried the estatic
meddler. " Instead of phone numbers, you
dial tn songs! Take a look at our new 1977
WPI phone book!"
I opened the bright yellow book to the
first page, where the introduction stated,
"The new tone extensions have been
selected wtth you, the user, In rnindl
Wherever possible, songs have been
matched to the personality of the office or
individual. To use the system. please enter
the first eight bars of the appropriate
song." "look," I said, "Ali i want to do is
make a phone call, not win the Grand Prize
on 'Name That Tune!' "
" But JUst look at the new ' numbers' ...
Profit pleaded, "and you'll see that you
won't ever forget to call somebody againl
When you think of the Concrete Lab, BAMI
'I've Got a Crush On You' comes right to
mind!"
I have to admit, he had a point there.
Just by thumbing through the book
quickly, I picked up dozens of " numbers"
that stuck in my mind, such a :
Daka "Plop-plop. Fiz· Fiz .•. ";
President - ''Hail to the Chief"; Plant
Services - "Colonel Bogle March"; Boiler
Room " Theme from ' Ice Station
Zebra' " " Hot Time In The Old Town
Tonight"; Mil Room - "Slow Boat to
China"; Financial Aid - "Brother, Can vou
Spare a Dime?"; Consortium - "Cab
Ofiver" "Do You Know the Way to San
Jose?";
Academic Advising
and
Scheduling "Mission: lmpouible
Theme"; Paint Shop (George Gillilt "Colour My World"; Admissions Office "Hey, Look me Overt" "Promises,
Promises": Pubic Relations - Accentuate
the PoaiYe; Ptumbing Shop - "Pipeline";
Accounting Office "Jingle, Jangle,
Jingle"; ROTC - "Praise the Lord, and
P8$S the Ammunition"; Bookstore ··snaft"; Campus Security - "Rat Foot
Aoogie" ' 'The Beat Goes On"; Civil
Engineering
"Chicago Tran•lt
Authority"; Concrete Laboratory - "I've
Got a Crush on Youl"; EG - "Switched on
Bach" !Special Arrangement by the Bee·
tric Ught Orchestral); Infirmary - "Fever"
"Moanln' "; Saba Halt "What Has
Sheraton Done for you Lately?"; lens and
Ughts Club - " Popcorn"; Mel Maauco-
" Aher the Ball" " Whitchita ~·
Chemistry "Classical Gas"; Ground
- " Grazing in the Grass"; Alden ~
Labs - " Sittin' on the Dock of the ~if
Pub - "Uttle Brown Jug" ''That ate
Mountain Dew"; Alumni Office _ '11
Remember You"; Harrington~
- " Raindrops Keep Fallin' On
Daniel the Spaniel - "You Ain't~:
But a Hound Dog!"; Nucl• ...._,
Facility - " Breakin' Up Is Hard to Da"
Glee Club (Prof. Louis Curren) Over, Beethoven!"; Mathemalica 0.....
" I've Got your Number"; Peddler Ofllae.
"II Was a Very Good Year!"· 01ug
Counseling Hotline " High ~·
Registrar's Office - "Nightmare" •,....;
from The Paper Chase"; Ru._.
Operations Dormitory 5enllea _
" Heartbreak Hotel"; Student
Office " Whisper Not"; N......a _
" Sensation Rag"; Alan King ~....
Coach) " I Get a Kick Out of YW': . .
Bands - " look What They've 0.. Te
My Song".
My phone book survey was .......,
interrupted when • rather large g11 • • •
came crashing through the office ........
spilling white paint over Profit's held a~
hit the floor.
" Jeez, Mr. Profit. I'm sony, 1111t . .
there ropes on the scaffolding • tD
again!" cried lhe wounded wortllr, . .
apparently had been painting the......,.
lilt before making his rather ..._ •
trance.
"That's d
right, Slim," 11M ..
~ty atlm Profit, "acdd•• ..
hllppen. Just get beck '*"*'t windowaifltl I want the whole plldi by winter. The 'Whiting of the __.
must go onJ"
"Right, Chlefl" uid the
the room vi8 the now welt-vented ......
"Stupid oxl" exdaimed the . _ .
Profit, under his btMth. "If
ing thOM ropes, we'M never 111 ~ ..
windowsilts and campus painted ......
time for the first snowl"
"Take it easy, Max," I gaped, ~
laughing fits. "The big guy just __,,..
tot of time and trouble. Now
that somebody ELSE did the whllt A;
for a change!"
c..;
My"'-"'·
Mom. my stomach really hurts. I just got
back from dinner. and it's JUSt not the same
as home. They pile everyone into this big
cafeteria, except they don't call It a
cafeterta, 1hey calltt a "dining hall" . I guess
11's psychology or somethrng. They don' t
want you 10 think It's the same thing we
had in high school
But 11 1$ the same. only worse. The food
1s really terrible. and people spf'~d more
1mP. playing w11h 11 than eaung 11. It's funny
how tn P.lementary school they yelled at us
Nhen we threw tood, but now in college no
nne savs anything. Everyone lUSt sits back
.1nc'i enjoys it. The place ts run by this guy
called "Norman" H~ seems like a really
n1ce quv. and I can't understand whv he
looks so happy so often. He must eat
somewhere else.
The cafeteria is really fun, though.
Everyone sits around, talks about girls at
the next table and complains about the
food. It's a real social occasion.
After dinner. everyone goes down into
the Pub to kill the pain. The Pub is the best
place on campus. I wish they held classes
down there. It would make them much
easier to take. I think I spend more time in
I he pub than I do in my room and in classes
combined. It's really great.
Tell Shirley that she'd love it up here.
There are hardly any girls at alt. I think
they're trying to kill us. If she was up here,
even her and her fat friend Darlene would
have guys all over them. The guys up here
get real desperate. They'll take anything
with lwo legs and long hair. I'm afraid one
day I'm gonna take a girl to a movie and
find out it's really a guy. My standards have
really gone down.
I live on a coed floor, which meana I get
to see more girts than most of the guys
around here. I guess I should consider
mys.ett lucky for that They caught one guy
up here hiding in the girts' shower one
night Boy, did he get in trouble. Everyone
thought it was reaUy funny, but the R.A. up
here didn't laugh as much as everyone else.
He told the kid if he ever did it again he
would be thrown out of school.
The R .A 's are usually pretty cool, but
they don'. let you get away with anything.
R l'. ,lands for " Resident Advisor", but I
r.an think of a few beller thmgs it could
stand for
Worcester ts a reaUy strange city. h's
boring as hell. You'd think ther'd be lots of
acuon cause there are so many schools
~~round here, but noth1ng e"c11ing happens.
The most excittng place downtown is this
shopping mall called Worcester Center.
wh1ch 1sn't saytng much. It 's a good place
ro sit around end go girl-watching. but you
r.an <>nly hang out there so long before you
qet bored. There are a few movie theatres
0
"'ai
co....
SJ:
ofler
will t
lhtlf
pta~
hive
point
three
Thl
l)llinllr.he._..._.
vouw•
londoll
Brie
Hello muddah ...
by Tony Camas
Dear Mom and Dad,
Boy, college life is awful. I've only been
here a week and a half or so (it seems much
longerl, and already I'm ready to pack it in.
Classes are OK. I guess, but they're no
fun at all . They really make you le11rn stuff
here. not like high school My friend Charlie
from California says it's the first time he's
ever learned any1hing in his life, and he
doesn't like it Me, I'm not sure yet. I
couldn't get into many classes because
they were all conflicts, so I JUSt dropped all
but one That one meets at 8;30 in the
morning, and I miss it a lot. My roommate
keeps tummg off my alarm clock before I
hear it .
Speaking of my roommate, God, what a
loser' He seemed all right at the beginning,
but then something happened to him. Now,
all he does is get up at noon and stay up all
night playing around With these computers
they have around here. He's a real freak. I
don't know what he does with them, but I
guess he's having fun, because there's
a whole bunch of these guys just like htm.
When they're not us10g the computers,
they an hang out together and ae1 weird.
They talk real 11range, too. I heard
someone caU them "gweeps"once. I'm not
sure what that means. Maybe they're from
a funny courtry somewhere. or something.
Fe
Dimuzi•
Really, things here are getting bid. •
I'm having a good time anyway. Bull....,
know how long I can hold out. 1'1 1M you
know how things go.
Tell Grandma thank you for the cociil.
bu 1 I didn't get any because ewryane an
the floor ate I hem before I could gee""
I'll be home after the end of term A. a,.
for now.
around, but I've seen all the movies that are
out !I've seen Star Wars six times now).
Th1s whole city dies every night at 9
o'clock 16 on weekends) . The only places
open after that are the Pub and this pizza
place down the road. I've spent more
money on pina and beer than I have on
books. And I'm gelling fat. There are also
parties every night at the fraternities. Those
guys are the only ones worse than the
gweeps. They sit around and drink all day
tong.
Fa
=
.....,
.......
P. S. Please send money.
t7
24
Your Footquarters for
~
t~
•
22 ...
a,.,
for Ms./Mr.
Worctster's Most Complete
And Up To Date Selection
of FRYE BOOTS
•Zipper Frye _ . . .
eNoHiaa ..II
eCh•ckl ac:cetttad whh etud•nt
e8reldad fl)'a bNII
•14",11", 11" Frva ....
eManv other 8tYIM
10
eCuH Frye bootll
HUSTON'S
Woruster c./Ill
StrMtlAvtl- ~ ....
across from SpHal',.
BankAmarloard
Charc1•
I(
15 WI
Boots
•Ma. -'tee 4· 10
•Mr. elz.. 7· 11
Iii(
cc
-
.......
ORGANIZATIONAL MBftl
'hMIIay, Se,tellW 13
MOIRN lAO CLUI
4:30P.M.
4UIMNI CONFERENCE ROOM
STUDENTS <Men & Women), .,ACULTY, STAFF- WELCOME
No experience necessary
N~
5 11~
NEWSPEAK
Page 15
Shooters make ready
Fall preview - the world
of variables in sports
by Barry Aronson
Spor1S are so full of variables that it is
often difficult to predict how well a team
w111 do College sports, in particular, have
tile added twist of never having the same
peyers from year to year. Many changes
hiV8 utken place since last fall, all of which
paint to improved performances for Tech's
1tvee fall varsity teams.
The football team is returning this year,
alter 1as1 year's disappointing 2-6 season,
.At~~ a new offense and defense. Last year's
Jllllhiple offense. which was dominated by
,.-og, will be replaced by a veer offense.
Tile veer offense Is designed to provide a
bllter balance of passing and rushing. This
.,.,·s defense, an umbrella type, will use
w backs, one more than was used in last
,_•s defense.
The football team's first home game will
• the season opener against NO!Wlch.
Sine time is 2:00 p.m. WPI has not beat
JllrWich in 14 years. The team has looked
_., good in !heir pre-season scrimages
1111. with a win against Norwich, could
)lmmer out a winning season. Tech plays
r.- Guard and Union after Norwich, both
4 which were beaten by Tech last year.
This year's team is considerably healthier
lin test year's. The only serious injury, to
1111. il Joe Norman's broken collar bone.
tit collar bone is broken in two places, and
• prevfJnt the promising freshman from
~ for the rest of the season. The only
tllllf injury was to fullback Alan
who burned his hand this
.-ner. Alan has been Tech's leading
•
for the last three years and will soon
llble 10 play against Norwich. He will
-.bly return to action for the Coast
~game. Jeff Bouyea will take his place
•Ill Norwich game.
Allo In the backfield are quarterback Art
ilghes, a junior from Astoria, N.Y., and
-.ck Mike Robin~on, a senior from New
illdQn, Conn.
hn MaCarthy, a senior, and Ray
hino, a JUnior who has not played for
Tech before, wilt fill the two tight end
positions used in the new veer offense.
Also on offense are Mike Walker, who will
be at flanker, and, at offensive tackle, cocaptain Dean Arvidson. Mike Walker is a
senior from Clinton, Mass., and is a twotime Associated Press All American.
Heading up the defensive team is cocaptain Serge Ochrineko. Serge is a senior
and has been WPI's leading tackler for the
last two years. Also looking good on
defense is Jeff Rosen, a sophomore free
safely who had six interceptions last year.
The cross country team witt be starting
off their season with a new head coach,
John Brandon. This year's team "looks
decent", and hope to improve on last year's
8-8 record.
Returning this year is sophomore John
Turpin, who was Tech's number one
runner last fall. Two juniors, Dave Szkutak
and Norm Crultlemette, also look decent
this year. Frank Leahy will be senior
captain. Unfortunately, Mike Murphy, who
did not run for Tech last year, witt not be
attending school this fall. Mike placed 36th
in the Boston Marathon, 12 minutes down
from the winner.
Fortunately there have been no realty big
changes in the WPI soccer team. Sixteen
members of last year's fantastic team will
be returning this year. Last year's team
ended 1heir season with an 11 -3-1 record
and a second place to Brandice In the New
England Division Ill NCAA Championships.
Brandice went on to become the national
champions.
John Pavlos, a senior from Greece, will
be re1uming this year. Last year, after he
was moved from midfield to toward, he
scored 17 gOQis, 10 of which were scored in
six games. Also returning is Leo Kaabe,
who last year S<:'Ored ten goals. Filling the
co-captains positions are Brian Clancy, a
senior playing at midfield, and Larry Hindle,
also a senior, at fullback.
Looks like this could be an exciting fall
for Tech.
Fall Sports Schedule
I
-
FOOT11All· VARSITY-
-
~ns O..n Anlldson, S.rgef Ochrlmenko
....... Pat Bartley
-Colch; Malvin G. Massucco
.......,.,
1l IIIOAWICH
II COAsT GUARD
.....
t llfltON
I IOWOOIN
....
......
• WEslEYAN
I ~TES
I HAMILTON
-
Home
Away
2;110p.m.
1:30pm
Home
Away
Home
Away
Homa
1;30p.m
Away
1.30p.m.
l~p.m
1:30pm
2:00pm
1:30pm
Caplaln. FtaJ1C:Ia Leahy Ill
M•nagef'.Stephen D'AIIasalldro
Coach: John Bralldon
Sept.,bar
21 ASSUMPTION
WORC. STATE. CLARK
24 MIT. RPI
27 WESLEYAN
OctOber
1 NICHOLS. U LOWElL
4 TUFTS. eENTLEY
a BATES
15 HOLYCROSS
19 COAST GUARD,
WILLI ... t,4S
22 EIOAA
November
5 NEW ENGLAND
9 TRINITY AMHERST
SOCCER • VAIIIIITY -
~Ina: Brian Clang, lawrene. Hindle
._.. David Chin
•eo.c" Alan King
~.
l! ~Y CROSS
Il IE~TLEY
Jill CO#,sT GUARO
....
lilt
HOI'IWI
Away
Away
10:30a m
3:30pm
11:00~ . m
3·00p m
....
Away
Away
Away
'liJFTs
~ ~BSON
~UMPTION
•MASS
: IICHOlS
IOsTON U
II ~RTFORO
Away
Away
Away
Home
Home
Home
Horne
Awey
Home
11l0p m
3.30pm.
2:00p.m
J.3Qp.m
I!OOam
330pm
2;00p m
7.30pm
I 1:00am
4·00p.m,
1'00p.m.
..,OOpm
Away
Aw•y
Away
Home
1:00p."'
4.00p.m.
2:30p.m
n ·ooa.m
Away
4;1l0p m.
Home
4.00pm
CROSS COUNTRY · JUNIOR VARSITY-
Coach: John Bralldon
Septamller
24 li!IT, RPI
Awey
1230pm
12
WORC ACADEMY
Away
3.00p.m
If you would like some competition. it
doesn't matler 1hat you don't shoot very
well; all members of the club can shoot in
any one of our W.C P.L matches. Tnere is
NO LIMIT to the number of people we can
take, and the more the beller. Also ammunition for matches is FREE so -you can
gain cornpelitive experience at no cost. We
are also trying 10 organize a women's piSiof
team for intercollegiate competition. Other
colleges have done this, but we don't yet
have enough interested women.
Last but certainly not the least of our
accomplishments Is the SAE Car Rally
team championship won by pistol team
members under the name of the "4th and
40 Team". The team placed five cars in the
top fifteen and one team car took lhe
award for least penalty poinls !01 accumulated on one leg.
We hope 1hat if you are interested, or
even if you don't think you will like pistol or
rifle shooting. that you will come down and
lry it . The range is In the basement of
Alumni Gym. You may find you enjoy being
a marksman.
n
Crew team
great season
by Barry Aronson
Worcester, their only fall race at nome.
They will close out the fall season October
23. with the Head of the Charles in Boston.
The crew team was invited to race In the
Eastern Sprints, which witt be held in
Worcester nex1 spring. Coach Plosa
decided to decline the invitation becauae
the Dad Vail Regatta was the same
weekend. He felt the team could get mOI'e
accomplished if they went to the Dad Vails.
The crew team started practice
yesterday. After last spring's many successes, including a win at the pretigious
Dad Vail Regat1a, the team expects to do
even better this year.
Tech's crew will row in three events this
fall. The Head of the Connecticut, the
learn's first race. will be October 9. The
next weekend will be a turn around race et
I·
vaacuna cc.scariUM rca
8ICIID
IDUCArl~,
IIIC•
7$4.-6119 O\' 7S6-Io970 (ldtu 5: 00 P·•·)
1977 hl.L SDIIITD IUS SQIKDULI - IICim&T TaOUCII Rllll'f
Depa"~""
7:30 A.H.
7:33
7:40
7:45
7:50
8:00
8: 20
8:,0
9:00
9: 10
9: 30
10:00
10:20
l0:30
11:00
11: 20
11:30
12 :00 Moon
12:20 P.M.
12:30
1:00
1:20
1:30
2:00
2:10
2:30
3: 00
3: 20
3:30
4 : 00
4:20
4: 30
!5:00
5:20
5: 30
6 : 30
liS
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11 : 25
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9 : 00**
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11:05
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to
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6:40
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3: 00
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4:20
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10: 10
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I
SUS STOP LOCAT:J:OIIS
Ooll•a•
Front of La lllllooa Pl'~il•
C1:af t C.nte\'
Front latTance, Sae-re load
City Boop.ltal
Cornu, Olaooll•\' aod Qu..n St,..eu
Clark lhllftTdty
Dc:olla1Dt Stl'. .t, Ac\'OU fr . . Llbr&")'
80 • Roly Ctou eou...
hoot of o•x.... llall
HB • ,.._rtal llolpita1
le'--nt St., hoot of Elderly lloudaa
&V - St. Vtueot Boopltal
Co~"• tla.,......d and Vtnthrol' Stuen
T - ~rc. l'olyuchotc ln1t1tute hoot of ~1ley Ball
·ws - Vorceote\' S~•~• Coll•l•
A.t.tniorration lu1ld1na, Side !ncreac•
11 - worcute\' Art Hu..ua
Col"'lAAr, SaUebuTJ ' Laoo:a.~tel' Suuu
tMC • Vorceeter Pili_~echnlc lnetltute , IIOJ:'c••c•r Art tlste . . and Creft Center
AS
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CH
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1:0
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7:30 A.ll.
.7: 40
7: 50
8:00
11: 20
11:30
11:40
9: 00
9•20
9: 30
f:40
10:00
10: 20
10: 30
10:40
T
Mil
SY
C!ll
CL
8C
6 : 50
7:00
7:10
Deputne
'ft-
.... f1
T'--
11:~
OctOber
I II OF LOWELL
I CI.AilK
:
-
Homa
CROSS COUNTRY · VAFISITY-
The new season for Jhe Rifle and Pistol
Club starts Saturday at 1:00, with safety
and marksmanship courses for new
shooters All W.P.I. students are eligible to
JOin the club. All you have to do is come to
the range any time it is open, and pay club
dues of $3.50 per year. Range hours for all
members are; Mon.·Thurs evenings 7:009:00 PM, and Saturday afternoons 1:005:00 PM. For team members, practices are
on Tues-Thurs. afternoons 3:()().5:00 PM.
Club officers are: President: C. Vance
Carter. Vice President: Dave Sheibley,
Secretary: Peter Schoonmaker, W.C.P.l.
Capt; Rich Skowronski, N.E.C.P.L. Capt:
John Caulmare.
The club competes in two pistol
leagues, the Worcester County Pistol
League, and the -North Eastern Collegiate
Pistol League. In the W .C.P.L., the team
finished third during the 75-76 and the 76seasons, and in the N.E.C.P. L.. the
collegiate team won the small college
division. This would seem to be quite an
accomplishment, since last year was only
our second year of competition in that
league.
•
•
-
Au~.~~~~ttion
•1u1 •t - 11 :00 f . H. - 11;25 P,M, lp!S MONpLY - t!URSDAY
P. H. - 9:2S P, H, I!!! r&IDAY
9/l/17
*"!Yt f1 • 9t00
-
SOCCER · JUNIOR VARSITY-
~ tornoUty Dr1aooll
~r
.llj~HURST
Oaata..
1
lllAN JR
~ f!Oilc. ACAO£MY
11 lliCESTER JR
UM~oss
Home
3;30p.m
Away
Away
330p.m
IO;OOa m
3:30pm
330p .m
Home
Homa
WARTED:
Adventurous
Companion
I
INTER SESSION
If you are interested in giving an intersession course in
January, please contact Harriet Kay (Washburn 300, Ext_ 591) by
Monday, September 19.
I
I·
1977 Homecomin1 Queen Contest
Nomiru~tions are now open for the 1977 WPI Homecoming Queen Contest. Nominations must be dropped
off at Student Affairs by TuesdAy, October4, 1977. Guidelines for the contest are as follows:
1. ~ndidate must be a full-time unclergradNte woman.
2. Application must be signed by CAndiUte.
3. Candidate must be sponsored by one of the following CAmpus groups:
a . Any official WPI organization Ci.e. fraternities clubs, offices, dep.~rtments)
b. lndividNI floors from Riley, O.niels, and Morgan residence halls.
c. Stoddard A, B, and C, Ellsworth and Fuller may nominate ONE CAndidate apiece.
d. Trowbridge 25 and 28, Elbridge may nomiute ONE eandidate apiece.
e. Commuters may nominate one CAndidate.
4. Fee of $10.00 must be submitted with appliatlon.
s. There will be a group meeting of all CAndidates on Thursday, Oct. 6, 1977. Candidates will be notified when
their nominations have been received.
6. Any questions should be referred to: Karen Chesney, Daniels 207, 798-0593, Box 2632; Dean Brown, Daniels
Lounge, 753-1411, X201 .
The following schedule will be required of all andidates:
THURS., OCT. 6-Group meeting of all CAndidates.
FRI ., OCT. 1 - Pictures taken.
TUES., OCT. H - Group interview with preliminary fudges, 7-1: 30 p.m.
WE D., OCT. 12- All CAndidates notified of five finalists via CAmpus mall.
tH URS., OCT. 13- Meeting of flu lists and escorts for briefing of next two days.
FRI., OCT. 14 - Finalists and escorts (sponsoring group; meet at Higgins House at 5:30p.m. wittr judges for a
wine and cheese hour followed by dinner.
SAT., OCT. 15-Motoradetogame1:15 p.m. Arinouncementofwlnnersathalf-tlme.
Judges will include representatives from local fashion and photography studios and recent alumni of the
college. Judges will consider the following in making their selections: poise, Intelligence, attractiveness and
personality.
------------------------------------------------------HOMECOMING QUEEN NOMINATION
Sponsoring group: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - Who to contact If necessary : - - - - - . . ; . . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - -
CANDIDATE INFORMATION :
Name: _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Class : - - - - - - - - - -
Malor: - - - -- -....--
WPI or Local Address:- - - - - - - P.O. Box : _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Phone No. _ _ _ _ __
Home Address:- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - Hobbies or areas of interest: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
all
I have consented to be nominated as a andidate for the WPI Homecoming Queen for 1977 and will attend
connected with the Homecoming Queen Contest.
funct~ons
Candidates sigMture : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -...;
v.,a. 1 No.
c
UJ
-
~
Tu.-dey, September 13, 1977